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@pugdexter
Mmmmm! Which Gummy Puglie flavor would be your favorite?? :3 :3 • • • #puglie #pug #illustration #vancouver #food #Candy #GummiBears #GummyBears #MondayMotivation #PugNation #Cute
Nadezhda Moryak
virtuallyinsane: Nadezhda Moryak
By raquel_tattoofreaks
@fairynuffflowers
As Told by Ginger (2000-2006)
Um no wtf. Some people have pre-existing conditions that make it difficult to breathe with a mask on. E.g. anxiety, asthma, COPD. Mind your own business.
Actually I have anxiety, claustrophobia, sensory issues, & severe asthma, yet I still wear at least one if not two masks in public.
“mind your own business,” it becomes my business if it’s possibly harmful to me or the people around me
Yes, some people have pre-existing conditions that can make wearing masks difficult, the solution is going out in public as little as possible or finding alternative face coverings. (I’m sure there’s more safe solutions out there that other people have figured out)
I have no solutions for an alternative face covering that would work for someone w/copd, but someone with copd probably wouldn’t want to be in public rn b/c they’re very high risk?!? (Please someone correct me if I’m wrong on any of this I do not have copd)
Also asthmatics and other high risk people should wear masks to protect ourselves if we can? Having a few asthma attacks or panic attacks is so much better than me or someone else dying from covid19.
Stop using my conditions and disabilities as an excuse for pushing harmful ideology.
first of all, anxiety is NOT a condition that necessitates not wearing a face mask, even the slightest bit. if you think it is, you’re an idiot.
for people with actual breathing conditions (such as copd or severe asthma), or anyone else who doesn’t want to wear a mask, face shields exist and are extremely cheap (you can get a 6-pack for 5 bucks):
the solution to “i can’t wear a mask because i have a breathing condition” is not “i can go out without a facial covering and endanger the lives of others”. it is either find an alternative face covering like a face shield, or don’t go out at all.
Thank you for this alternative. Recently I had to deal with someone claiming they were ill from carbon dioxide toxicity in the blood because they were forced to wear a mask for 8+ hours at their grocery store job.
My sister holds the same position with no such symptoms as this person had described from dizziness, disorientation, and vomiting. I suggested they go seek medical help based on those symptoms and stop going to work if possible.
I also informed them that unless that mask is glued to their face there is absolutely no way they are suffering from carbon dioxide toxicity unless they already have a premedical condition, in which case they shouldn’t be working anyway as they are susceptible. Even a N95 mask that I’ve seen a few people in public wear won’t cause CO2 toxicity unless you are already in poor health.
I won’t stand for people spreading lies and increasing the herd immunity threshold when cases are still piling up. So please wear a masl, or a face shield. Stay at home of you are sick or have an pre-existing breathing problems.
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Medical error is estimated to be the 3rd biggest killer in the US. Researchers at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine concluded that over a quarter of a million people died in 2013 due to mistakes made by health care professionals. That number, which was based only on people who died inside a hospital, is more than double the number of suicides, firearm deaths, and motor vehicle fatalities combined. Source Source 2 Source 3
(That number doesn’t account for those who died after they were mistakenly sent home. Medical error is not included in cause of death rankings or on death certificates, and these fatal mistakes often go unreported. This ultimately causes other medical professionals to encounter the same life-threatening mistakes because they’ve no examples to reference as a warning.)
The physical act of passing through a doorway is the reason why you often walk into a room and completely forget what you were doing. Because going through a door signifies the beginning or end of something, this creates an ‘event boundary’ within your mind. Basically, every time you walk through a doorway, your brain starts filing away thoughts from your previous location to make room for a new group of memories in the next.
(Source, Source 2, Source 3)