Harvard: hāʻawi nā masks i ka huakaʻi holoʻokoʻa i kahi pale nui mai COVID-19

Harvard: hāʻawi nā masks i ka huakaʻi holoʻokoʻa i kahi pale nui mai COVID-19
Harvard: hāʻawi nā masks i ka huakaʻi holoʻokoʻa i kahi pale nui mai COVID-19
i kakauia ma Harry Johnson

ʻO nā pale maka he ʻāpana nui ia o ka hoʻolālā layered e mālama i nā mea kūʻai aku palekana a hoʻēmi i ka lawe ʻana o Covid-19 ma ka huakaʻi hele a pau, e like me ka hoʻolaha ʻenehana hou i paʻi ʻia i kēia pule e nā kumu ma Harvard's TH Chan School of Public Health.

ʻO nā hopena o ke aʻo ʻana e pili ana i ka noiʻi hou e hōʻike nei i ka hoʻohana ākea o nā masks i nā hoʻonohonoho e like me nā mea ma nā mokulele e hōʻemi paha i ka maʻi maʻi mai nā mea hanu i lalo o ka 1 pakeneka.

"He mea koʻikoʻi ka hoʻohana ʻana i nā pale maka i loko o ke kaʻina huakaʻi lewa, mai ke komo ʻana i ke kahua mokulele no ka haʻalele ʻana a haʻalele i ke kahua mokulele huakaʻi," e like me ka hōʻike a Harvard. "Ke hoʻokō ʻia ka hoʻohana ʻana i nā pale huna me nā hana ʻē aʻe i kūkulu ʻia i loko o nā hana mokulele, e like me ka hoʻonui ʻana o ka ea me ka kānana HEPA i nā mokulele a me ka disinfection o nā ʻilikai, hāʻawi kēia mau papa hana [pale] i ka pale nui mai ka loaʻa ʻana o COVID-19 ma o ka huakaʻi ea."

Harvard's bulletin - ʻāpana o kahi o nā ʻōlelo hōʻike e pili ana i ka hōʻike e hōʻemi ai i nā pilikia olakino lehulehu o ka lele ʻana i ka Covid-19 maʻi ahulau - kuhikuhi pū kekahi i kahi hōʻike hou e wehewehe ana i kekahi mau ohua COVID-19-maikaʻi i holo i ka lele he 15 mau hola me 350 mau ohua ʻē aʻe; komo nā ʻelua i nā pale maka, ʻaʻohe mea ʻē aʻe i ka lele e maʻi.

I US, Delta Airlines ʻo ia kekahi o nā mokulele mua e koi i nā mea kūʻai aku a me nā limahana e ʻaahu i ka pale maka a i ʻole ke uhi maka ma nā wahi kiko Delta ma nā kahua mokulele a ma luna o ka mokulele. He hoʻolōʻihi ʻia ia o kā mākou kūpaʻa palekana, a he kuleana mākou e lawe koʻikoʻi. Nīnau aku ʻo Delta i nā mea kūʻai aku e ʻike ma ke ʻano he ʻāpana o ke kaʻina hana hōʻoia i ko lākou makemake e komo i kahi mask ma nā huakaʻi holoʻokoʻa. A ke koi nei ka mokulele i nā mea kūʻai aku i kahi ʻano paʻa e pale ai iā lākou mai ke kau ʻana i ka pale maka e hoʻopau i ke kaʻina hana "Clearance-To-Fly" ke hōʻea i ke kahua mokulele.

"ʻAʻohe kānalua ʻo ke kau ʻana i ka pale maka kekahi ala nui e palekana i ke kahua mokulele a ma luna o ka moku, a no ke kumu o ka wikiwiki o ka hoʻokomo ʻana iā ia i kā mākou ala e pale aku ai i kā mākou mea kūʻai aku a me nā limahana," wahi a ka Delta's Chief ʻO Bill Lentsch ka luna ʻike ʻo Customer. "Mahalo no ka hana ʻana i kāu ʻaoʻao e palekana a pale aku i ka poʻe a puni ʻoe."

He aha e lawe ʻia mai kēia ʻatikala:

  • “There's no doubt that wearing a face mask is one of the most important ways to stay safe in the airport and on board, and it's why we were so quick to incorporate it into our approach to protecting our customers and employees,” said Delta's Chief Customer Experience Officer Bill Lentsch.
  • In US, Delta Air Lines was one of the first airlines to require customers and employees to wear a mask or face covering across Delta touchpoints at airports and onboard the aircraft.
  • Face masks are an essential part of a layered strategy to keep customers safe and reduce transmission of COVID-19 throughout air travel, according to a new technical bulletin published this week by faculty at Harvard's T.

<

No ka mea kākau

Harry Johnson

ʻO Harry Johnson ka hoʻoponopono hoʻoponopono na eTurboNews no ka mroe mamua o 20 makahiki. Noho ʻo ia ma Honolulu, Hawaii, a no ʻEulopa. Leʻaleʻa ʻo ia i ke kākau ʻana a me ka uhi ʻana i ka nūhou.

Kaʻana like i...