The studies covered in the videos suggest they don't make any difference to the number of patients getting infections after surgery. No data was provided on whether the protect the clinicians from disease.
1 year ago | 5
To reduce possibility of exchange of fluids, eg saliva from surgeon to patient and blood from patient to surgeon. ?
1 year ago | 3
And the operating room is in negative pressure. Meaning air is suck in to not go any where to then been shoot out of the building after all the filter.
1 year ago | 1
and to protect docs nurses from splatter. droplets from doc to patient. splatter from patient to doc. aerosols and viruses not affected by masks.
1 year ago | 2
Medicine with Dr. Moran
Why Do Surgeons and Operating Room Staff Need to Wear Masks? https://youtu.be/2S4VEIgFrgs I’m going to tell you the history about why surgeons started wearing surgical masks, what they are good for, and what a few of the medical opinions about masking in the operating room are today. There have been studies done with masked and unmasked operating staff. I'm also going to answer a few follow-up questions at 09:01 and comments from my video about the Cochrane review of masking.
There has been research on the Covid vaccine and how Blood Clots form. It is important to clarify the mechanism and so a great deal of research is gone into elucidating the cause. I review this in the video. What is clear is that the Covid vaccine needs to get into the bloodstream in order for this to occur. https://youtu.be/It7VNzhAqOs
1 year ago | [YT] | 125