Post #601: If you don’t want to spend a month slowly suffocating to death …

Posted on April 4, 2020
Note to regular readers:  This is a compendium of everything I think I know about the current pandemic.  Some material repeats prior posts.  I am hoping to get wider distribution of this once it is finished.  But I have been told that this is a hard post to read.  All I can say is, read it anyway.

By Christopher Hogan, Ph.D.

If you don’t want to spend a month slowly suffocating to death, the CDC has a tip for you:  Wear a mask.  Wear one any time you’re around people other than your immediate family.  That won’t guarantee that you’ll avoid dying from COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2), but it will improve your odds.  And it will improve everyone else’s odds as well.

Sure, you need to keep doing everything else that the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has recommended.  Wash your hands and maintain your distance.  Wash your hands and avoid touching your face.  Disinfect commonly-touched surfaces in your home.  And then wash your hands again.  But now, in addition, wear a mask whenever you are around people other than your immediate family.

As I write this, it looks like we’re about a week away from inevitable mass deaths in New York City.  That’s going to happen when they run out of ventilators and they start just letting people die.  Not because they want to, but because there will be no other option.

We don’t know, yet, whether other parts of the country will end up in that position or not.  Including the Washington DC area.  We’ve taken the gamble that “social distancing” will break the back of this pandemic.  But in fact, nobody knows whether our “soft” approach to social distancing will slow the spread  enough.

In effect, we are in the middle of a vast experiment.  Performed ad-hoc, one city or state at a time.  And we’re the guinea pigs.

Or maybe sheep would be a better analogy.  Because, by and large, We the People have been sitting around, hoping that our various government leaders will solve this problem for us.  And we are now finding out that, outside of the US Army Corps of Engineers, not only is the Federal government not helping, it has actively been getting in the way.

In two critical ways, business-as-usual mistakes by two Federal agencies have made things vastly worse.  And those two key mistakes dovetail in such a way as to increase your risk of death materially.

But before I get into that, let me remind you of what, exactly, we’re talking about.  In so far as a person can know, absent first-hand experience.


What will it be like to die from COVID-19?

The short answer is that it will take a while, you’ll be alone, and you’ll be on a ventilator as you slowly suffocate to death.  That means that you will be confused, unable to move and likely delirious when you are conscious.

And that’s the best-case scenario.  That assumes you get into a hospital, a ventilator is available, and the drug stocks hold out.

First, it will take a while.  World Health Organization analysis of the Chinese experience suggests that, among decedents, it typically takes two to eight weeks from diagnosis to death.  Given that this type of data typically has a “long right tail”, a good guess for the median would be about three-and-a-half weeks.  But that’s awkward to say, so let me just say “about a month”.

Second, you’ll be alone:  You’ll never see your family again.  Hospitals are no longer allowing visitors, almost without exception.  Looking at Inova as an example, they say they make an exception for (e.g.) some end-of-life situations.  But not in the case of COVID-19.

"Visitation will not be allowed for suspected or confirmed patients with COVID-19."

The upshot of that is that if you die in the hospital, from the time of admission to the time of death, you (or your loved one) will never see family or friends again.  You won’t have any way to know that, ahead of time, because you don’t enter the hospital expecting to die.  But that will be the outcome, after the fact.

Third, you’ll be on a ventilator for some time, with all that entails.  In most if not all cases, they have to dope you up, eventually, so you don’t “fight the ventilator”.  So, you’ll be not-quite-unconscious, and not-quite totally unable to move.  And being in that ICU environment for any length of time makes many people literally go crazy, as in, experience delirium (as in ICU psychosis).


Two big mistakes.

OK, with that firmly in mind, let’s move on to the two big mistakes our Federal government has made.  So far.  And a third big mistake that we need to prevent. And then, finally, what we can do, for ourselves, as a sort of mid-course correction.


Mistake 1:  The N95 mask shortage and the Food and Drug Administration rules

I used to be self-employed as a health economist.  And  I still get a lot of business-to-business emails.  One of those landed in my in-box yesterday.  It was a legitimate offer to sell me up to 5 million N95 and KN95 masks per month.  If I only need a few — 100,000, say — they could get them to me in three to five days.  Larger orders would take a bit. The masks cost about $3 each.  Free shipping.

My first thought was, what alternative universe did that come from?  All I read is that we have a huge shortage of those N95 masks.  So much so that it is our patriotic and ethical duty to leave those for the health care workers.  You, as a good citizen, need to accept a small additional risk of death, so that front-line health care workers and first responders don’t have to take a much larger risk.  Just look on Amazon, and you’ll see those clearly marked “Hands Off” for the general public.

If they’re in such short supply, how can this joker offer me 100,000 masks by next Wednesday?  (Not me personally, of course, he mistook my business as one that actually provides health care.)  And what the heck is a KN95, anyway?  I thought they were called N95.

Well, as it now turns out, it looks like that shortage was, in some large part, the result of our shooting ourselves in the foot.  And now, months into the US portion of the pandemic, the Food and Drug Administration has graciously, if ever-so-slowly and ever-so-grudgingly, decided to stop doing that.

The FDA would not allow Chinese-made N95-equivalent masks (“KN95”) to be used in US hospitals.  If you look at the full specs for N95 and KN95 (here, from 3M, in a .pdf), they are virtually identical.  I believe the FDA’s concern was not about the performance of the masks, but instead about the potentially insecure supply chain (i.e., you might get sold knock-offs).

But as of two days ago, the FDA changed its mind.  Apparently after numerous people yelled at them for the stupidity of their actions, including a petition that collected thousands of signatures of front-line health care personnel. Just read it on Buzzfeed.

And as a result, yesterday I got that email.  It was from a well-established firm whose main line of business is helping other companies sell to the Federal government.  They’re deal-makers, for want of a better term.  And right now, they’re in the business of arranging import of KN95 masks from China.  They were ready to go the day the FDA dropped the ban.  And I doubt that they were the only ones in that position.

So I expect our mask shortage to begin easing soon.  Through the simple expedient of buying them.  And it only took us a few months to think of doing that.  Better late than never, I guess.

For the time being, consumers should still refrain from buying them.  Leave what we have for health care workers and first responders.  For now.

And, as far as I can tell, anything you want to know about masks, that is known, you can find on the Smart Air website.  If you have a question, look there first.  I have no idea who those folks are, but I am glad they are sharing their knowledge.


Mistake 2: CDC guidance and its misunderstanding of how COVID-19 spreads.

Let’s briefly review what has changed, now that the CDC has quietly added “wear a cloth mask” to its guidance to the public on dealing with COVID-19.

A week ago, CDC was saying that COVID-19 was primarily spread by droplet transmission from symptomatic individuals.  And so, in effect, stay out of range of droplets when an obviously sick person coughs or sneezes, and hey, you’ll be OK.  Keep your distance and wash your hands.  Social distancing will keep you safe, so there’s no need to wear a mask.

Anyone who was paying attention realized that couldn’t possibly be right.  You really couldn’t explain the spread of disease that way.  I mean, do you really think they let somebody who was coughing and hacking anywhere near the Prime Minister of Great Britain in the past few weeks?

Even for hoi polloi, that explanation wasn’t credible once social distancing was in place.  Based on the handful of shopping trips I have made in the past three weeks, nobody is stupid enough to be out in public with symptoms of COVID-19. The idea that this is mainly spread by people coughing and sneezing is just plain nuts.

Not-being-sick-in-public is now a rigidly-enforced social norm.  Last time I was in the Safeway, somebody, somewhere in the store, coughed.  And we shoppers reacted like a herd of startled deer.  Heads came up.  Eye contact was made.  Everybody made that little “wasn’t me” gesture.  These days, you’ll get some hard looks if you so much as clear your throat loudly in the grocery store.

Finally, just do the simple arithmetic.  COVID-19 has a median incubation period of 5 to 6 days, based on the Chinese experience.  In Fairfax County, my home, schools have been closed for more than three weeks now.  And yet, the count of cases continues to climb at an accelerating rate, with Fairfax expected to top 400 cases today.  Do the math.  We’re now seeing our third or fourth generation of new infections since the start of serious social distancing.  If “stay out of range when sick people cough” was all it takes, we wouldn’t be seeing this.

Today?  Now CDC says, well, maybe this is being routinely spread by asymptomatic individuals.  People who don’t look sick, feel sick, or sound sick.  Maybe you don’t have to cough or sneeze, because most people spew tiny droplets simply by talking.   And — not clear if they are saying it or not, but true nevertheless  — clearly some of this is aerosol spread, for which, indoors, there is no “out-of-range”.

And so, as their understanding of the facts has changed, the CDC has changed its mind.  Everybody needs to mask up in public.  Social distancing is not enough.  Particularly not when the head of the Chinese CDC called failing to require masks in public “the big mistake” that the US and Europe were making. Presumably, he would know.

So the CDC is finally getting it.  This disease is a lot easier to spread than they thought.  And it’s not being spread by obviously sick people.  So everybody needs to wear a mask, all the time, when you are in public around others.

In addition to droplet transmission, we need to start having public discussion of the potential for aerosol (airborne) transmission (particularly close-range aerosol transmission) and superspreaders.   Because at this point, it’s clear that the CDC isn’t going to be doing that despite clear evidence that it has occurred.  And, so, without an explicit warning from the CDC, we risk that it will continue to occur.

(If you read nothing else, go read the University of Minnesota, Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy piece that explains the importance of close-range aerosol transmission.  My takeaway from that is that, arguably, the stupidest thing we can be doing, right now, is to stand six feet apart and talk at each other, loudly, with no masks on.)

Everyone needs to read about the safely-conducted, properly-socially-distanced, hand-sanitized, no-hugs choir practice that resulted in 45 infections and two  deaths (so far), out of 60-member choir.  That’s aerosol spread.  There’s no way to be sure, but that’s plausibly due to a single infected individual who was a superemitter of aerosols.

And that’s the kind of event that may continue to happen if we don’t educate ourselves about it. (But in groups no larger than ten, these days, in Virginia).  Because at this point it’s clear that the CDC isn’t going to do that for us.  Possibly for fear of panicking the public.  Possibly because they believe their epidemiological evidence rules that out as a common transmission route outside of the hospital.  (But inside the hospital is a different story.  The threat of aerosol transmission is the main reason they need those N95 masks instead of common surgical masks, and why the US Army Corps of Engineers has worked up an expedient way to convert hotel rooms to negative-pressure rooms for housing the overflow of COVID-19 patients.)

But we also have to say what needs to be said:  So far, the CDC has been dead wrong about how this virus routinely spreads.  They kept telling the public that coughing and sneezing by clearly sick individuals was the problem.  And so, social distancing and hand washing was the answer.  You can’t really blame the CDC, because droplet transmission by symptomatic individuals is what the WHO analysis of China (cited above) said.  But it’s still wrong.  And you have to wonder why, up to now, they continued to ignore the potential for widespread transmission by asymptomatic individuals.  Maybe the thought that was just too scary for us to handle?

In any case, however they got there, they have now come to realize that a lot of the spread must be via asymptomatic individuals. As had anyone else who has been paying attention.  Because nobody with symptoms of anything is going out in public any more.

But they’re still focused on droplet transmission, and they aren’t going to mention aerosol transmission.  Maybe that’s because they have evidence that strongly supports that.  Maybe they won’t mention it because they don’t want a run on the N95 masks needed to filter out aerosol-sized (five micron or smaller) droplets.  Or maybe because they think that’s just too scary for us to handle.  However you slice it, after this first about-face on the typical transmission route, I’m not sure it means anything that the CDC isn’t talking about aerosol spread.

The CDC is mum on this topic despite that certain knowledge that many historical and current contagious diseases were characterized by aerosol transmission.  Those include both bacterial disease such as tuberculosis and viral diseases such as Ebola and some forms of influenza.

And in this case, there’s an old saw that clearly applies.  It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble.  It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so.  Every thinking American took the CDC guidance as an indication of what they knew about how this disease spreads.  And, as it turns out, that just wasn’t so.

If aerosol spread is a probable route of transmission, we’re unknowingly making a major public health blunder by standing around talking loudly to each other.  Speech generate large volumes of aerosol-sized (5 micro or smaller) droplets.  Loud speech generates more.  And singing generates those droplets at roughly the same rate that coughing does.  Which is, in all likelihood, how almost that entire choir got infected from a single choir rehearsal.

No mask that you can ethically buy right now will stop all, or even most, of those tiny aerosol droplets.  Your only option, for benefit of us all, is to try not to generate them.

So shut up when you are in public.  That’s advice the CDC needs to offer us, but can’t.  Because, for whatever reason, they won’t engage in public discussion of the potential for aerosol transmission.  We need to do that for ourselves.  So far,  “superspreader” events like that choir rehearsal are almost unheard-of.  Let’s hope it stays that way.


The synergy of those two mistakes.

So now the CDC has added a wishy-washy bit of advice to their guidance to the public:  Wear a cloth face covering.  Wear a cloth mask, if you will.

Why cloth?  That pretty much means that every American has to make one, borrow one, or scrounge one up.  Is there something beneficial about cloth masks?  Do they perform well.

No.  The recommendation for cloth masks isn’t to protect you, the wearer, very much.  With luck, skill, and diligence, a face mask made out of cloth can be constructed so as to provide nearly as much protection to the wearer as a standard hospital surgical mask.  If you happen to make the right choice of fabric, you can filter out aerosol particles almost as well as a standard surgical mask.  But it’s a good bet that the typical cloth mask won’t come up to that standard.

Wearing a cloth masks probably does help protect others, in the event that you’re infected but don’t know it yet.  I keeps you from spreading disease by capturing or at least slowing the velocity of the droplets you emit.  So that’s a plus, and that’s the public health benefit.  But wearing a commercially-made mask would probably do a better job of that, too.

The guidance to use a cloth mask is there because the CDC is afraid of exacerbating the N95 mask shortage.  Commercially-produced masks are better (surgical mask), and sometimes vastly better (N95 respirator), than what the typical American is going to be able to whip up on the fly.  The guidance to wear a cloth mask is to keep the public from purchasing those “real” masks.

But no reputable seller has N95 masks for sale to the public.  Just look on Amazon.  See what Home Depot has done.  Any reputable entity that could channel a large number of such masks to the public has withdrawn those from the market.

And, see Mistake 1.  With the lifting of the ban on use of KN95 masks, and the realization that standard N95s and similar masks can be filter air effectively for vastly longer than a single use, with relatively little risk if appropriate protocols are adopted, it’s a fair bet that this N95 mask shortage is simply going to disappear as a factor in the future progress of this pandemic.

And yet, it’s the heart of current CDC guidance.  Will that change in the near future, if the mask shortage abates?  I guess we’ll see.

What has me truly irked, of course, is how the FDA exacerbation of the N95 mask shortage dovetails with the CDC decision not to recommend masks in public.  If you think about it, if these two agencies had done this differently, there’s some chance that we could have all been wearing KN95 masks whenever we were out in public.  Or, maybe, all the people in New York City could have been wearing KN95s whenever they were in public.  And maybe it’s not too late to make that happen.  Bet that would have altered the course of this some.

If the importation of large numbers of KN95 masks from China resolves the current N95 shortage, the next city to approach the situation that New York is in will have the opportunity to issue those effective, commercially-available masks to citizens and enforce wearing them in public places.  Before they run out of ventilators.

The whole point of an N95 mask (technically, respirator) is that, when properly worn, very little gets through it.  It’s effective at stopping even the most difficult-to-catch size of aerosol particle (0.3 microns).  Nothing is a perfect, but that’s (very nearly) as good as it gets.  (Unless you want to wear a half-face or full-face respirator.)  And that, and hand washing, and social distancing, would seem to up the odds of breaking the back of this pandemic.  If we can solve the current and apparently self-inflicted mask shortage, we need to start thinking of the strategic deployment of those masks to the citizenry, and enforcement of public mask use.


Will vaccine development be the next big Federal mistake?

Edit:  Upon re-reading this the next day, I think I overstated the case for skipping Phase I trials in this emergency, slightly, so let me clarify.  But I still conclude that it would be smarter to proceed directly to Phase II, in terms of total lives lost.  You will need to read the rest of this section, then come back and re-read this. 

What I forgot in the first draft of this is that vaccine trials have a unique feature:  You can use the Phase I trial to see whether or not vaccine recipients develop the appropriate antibodies.  That can prevent you from going on to Phase II, and needlessly exposing a cohort of individuals to coronavirus with a vaccine that has no chance of success.  Further, if you move directly to Phase II, and expose the patients to disease, that would confound your ability to determine whether or not patients developed antibodies from the vaccine alone.

That said, somebody needs to do the estimate of total lives lost under two scenarios:  Business-as-usual:  Take the N months required for Phase I, and ultimately distribution the vaccine X + N months down the road.  Emergency approach:  Skip Phase I, and distribute it a X months down the road. 

To some degree, that calculation depends on what you think the state of the world will be X months from now.  That is, how many people you think will die in the period from X to X + N.  If you are convinced that this will be under control, you might judge that fewer lives would be lost under business-as-usual.  If not, you’d judge that fewer lives would be lost with the emergency method.

Given that the total number of people in the vaccine trial will likely number in the hundreds, while the number of people at significant risk of dying from COVID-19 will likely still be in (at least) the tens of millions, I’m almost sure that under any plausible scenario, fewer lives would be lost under the emergency methods that skips Phase I. 

That’s all I’m trying to say.  The text of my original post follows.

So far, there’s scant information available to the public on what the Federal government is doing to produce a vaccine.  But I can tell you, from what I’ve read, and based on what we’ve seen from FDA and CDC so far, I’m not betting on seeing one any time soon.

What sets me off on this topic is the report that the Federal government was starting Phase I trials of a vaccine.  To which I said, why in the hell are they doing that?  Allow me to explain.

Drug development goes through three phases.  Phase I simply tests whether or not the drug will kill you.  Is it safe?  It doesn’t actually do anything to test whether or not it works.  (Edit:  See above.  You do test development of antibodies.)  Phase II is where you start to test whether the drug works or not, and typically tries a few different dosing regimens to see what works best.  Then Phase III re-tests whether it works, using the most promising dosing regimen.

There’s no barrier to skipping Phase I.  If the proposed vaccine kills people, you’ll find that out in Phase II.  (Edit:  And so, if the vaccine could have been discarded as ineffective in Phase I, you risk needlessly killing some of the treatment group by skipping that, but gain lives saved by delivering an effective vaccine sooner than you otherwise would.) And normally, under business-as-usual, sure, you wouldn’t want to take a risk of killing a large number of people.  So you do a small Phase I trial first.  Take a few months, go slow, don’t push it.  Just on the off-chance that what you’ve developed is particularly deadly.

But in this case, every day that we don’t have a vaccine is a day that more people die.  What are we up to now, about a thousand a day?  Is that going to double or triple when New York City hits the wall?  How long is that going to go on?

Skipping straight to Phase II risks killing a few more people than you might have otherwise.  On the other hand, how many additional deaths will result from each additional day of delay in creating this vaccine?  Has anyone even bothered to do the cost-benenfit analysis of Phase I in this case? 

Or, as I suspect, is this just another example of a Federal agency that can’t shake itself loose from its business-as-usual attitude?  On the one hand, they realize this is a national emergency. They press forward with all due haste.  But on the other hand, it never even occurs to them to skip Phase I.  Or, if it does, the people making their decisions, within their own silos, are not being forced to see the big picture.

The question of how many deaths for each day of delay is not an idle one.  That will will depend on the state of the pandemic at the point when the vaccine is ready for distribution.  Maybe our current state and local experiments in social distancing will pay off, and nobody will be dying from this 12 to 18 months from now.  In that case, sure, take your time.  On the other hand, maybe we’ll never get this fully under control, and we’ll still be looking at 1000 deaths a day, 12 months from now.  In which case, in hindsight, this will be yet a third example of business-as-usual by a Federal agency being exactly the wrong choice.

So it’s a gamble, and I’m not sure our Federal government realizes it.  Phase I makes perfect sense — if you think all the dying will be over before the vaccine is ready.  Phase I is lunacy if you don’t.  If it were up to me, I’d hedge my bets in favor of developing this as rapidly as possible, just in case we’re still dying from this, in large numbers, a year from now.


But back in the real world, citizens are not taking this seriously enough.

Based on my last trip to the grocery store, it’s clear that many people and some major corporations still haven’t gotten the message.  Yesterday, at my local Safeway, maybe a third of the employees were wearing masks.  And at least some employees were not maintaining social distance. I expected to see that sort of thing among the shoppers, and did.  Some people are hopelessly stupid and there’s not much you can do about it.  But I did not expect that from a major US corporation with a huge number of public-facing employees.

Just do the math:  My home, Fairfax County, has 400 known cases of coronavirus and about 800,000 adults.  Based on the recent daily growth, it’s fair to say we likely have at least one case of undetected coronavirus per 500 adults, right now.  That Safeway is the largest one on the East Coast, so I’m guessing they have 2000 people a day walk through there, even with this pandemic.  With those numbers, the odds are overwhelming that those Safeway employees are being exposed to coronavirus, right now, every day. 

And what do I see?  No masks, no sneeze guards at the registers, no enforcement of social distancing.  No nothing.  For the single largest grocery store in the area.

My wife called the manager to complain, and got a classic corporate non-response.  Safeway says its up to each individual employee to wear a mask or not.  A corporation with a huge public-facing staff, and their policy is, every man for himself.

I’m still trying to figure out whether they are unaware of the almost-certain daily exposure of their staff, or they just don’t care.  The only thing I know for sure is that I’m not going back there until this pandemic is over.  Maybe never.  And that’s from a loyal life-long Safeway shopper.

Doesn’t anybody get this?  We haven’t fixed it.  We hope we’ve fixed it, sure.  But there’s no guarantee that our various half-hearted attempts at social distancing will, in fact, work.  Look at what China imposed in Wuhan, then go to your local grocery store and see what’s going on.  The game isn’t over yet.  The fat lady has not yet sung.  I don’t think we’ve reached an inflection point (where the daily increase in cases begins to decline) in any US state yet.  For sure, we haven’t reached that in the Commonwealth of Virginia.

And the clerks at Safeway aren’t wearing masks.  Official corporate policy at the largest grocery store in the County is, eh, wear ’em if you want to.  This is so wrong.  We need to start thinking of getting ahead of the curve, not acting like a bunch of sheep.

So, for damned sure, I’m not going to spend another penny on a vendor who is too lazy, or too foolish, to require all public-facing personnel to mask up.  Not if I have any alternative.   I suggest that all of you do the same, and maybe that will speed them along toward eventually figuring this out.

We, as a country, are in the process of running out of hospital beds, masks, respirators, and staff.  As we scramble to build temporary hospital space, now more than ever, public health officials need to keep in mind the reverse of Roemer’s Law:  A bed not filled is a bed not built. 

We as citizens, have an obligation to ourselves not to be the moron who fills the next bed.  Morally, I’m a Darwin Awards fan.  I really have little objection to stupid people getting themselves killed for their stupidity.  But in this case, with beds and ventilators in scant supply, stupidity is going to kill a lot of innocent bystanders.  If our current lackadaisical attitude results in filling all the beds by the time I catch this disease, then I’m going to be the one left to suffocate slowly at home.

Unsurprisingly, I object to that.


Summary:  What can you do?

Rule 1:  Don’t be the dumbass who fills the next available hospital bed.

The big change this week is that the CDC has finally figured out that this is being spread by people who are infected, but don’t have symptoms.  You need to act as if you are one of those people.  And you need to act as if everyone you meet outside of your immediate family is one of those people.

Outside of your home, treat yourself and everyone else as potential carriers of coronavirus.  Not because you’re paranoid.  But because its true.

First, minimize trips to public places.  Given the shortage of delivery slots for groceries, I’ve decided to continue grocery shopping in person.  And, while I’m there, I pick up a few things for relatives and neighbors.  There’s no sense having three people in the grocery store when it only takes one.

Two, do what the CDC tells you to do.  Wash your hands.  Maintain a 6′ distance.  Wash your hands.  Don’t touch your face. Wash your hands.  And if you even think you might be sick, stay home.

Three, wear a mask when you are in public around other people.  In particular, wear a mask whenever you find yourself talking to someone, in person, outside of your immediate family.

Fourth, unless and until the CDC can firmly rule out aerosol transmission of this disease, keep your voice down when in public.  Ideally, just keep your mouth shut, because talking releases large numbers of aerosol particles.

Fifth, wear the best mask that you own, right now.  If you don’t own one, ask around.  If you have to make one, there are plenty of plans available.  And I’ll give you my tip:  The smart people have figured out that the best possible material for use in an expedient (home-made) mask is the inside of a high-end furnace filter.  I’ve heard Filtrete 1900 or better.  I’d accept MERV-13 or better.  See Post #593 for details.  If you have access to materials like that, incorporate them into your home-made mask.

Sixth, if the importation of KN95 masks solves the mask shortage, the Federal government needs to step up and target any excess to hard-hit cities and towns.  And those cities and towns need to distribute those, and enforce public mask use by ordinance.

Seventh, urge your city or town to enforce public mask use by ordinance.

Eighth, boycott any business that does not require all public-facing employees to use masks, or a least puts them behind a sneeze guard or some other effective barrier.  In my area, it’s a sure bet that employees in the largest retail establishments are now being exposed to coronavirus on a daily basis.  Corporation who can’t figure that out don’t deserve your money.

Ninth, write your Congressman and urge all possible haste on vaccine development.  We really have no clue what things are going to look like a year from now.  Bureaucracies stick to business-as-usual unless and until somebody screams at them loudly enough.  Maybe we all need to start screaming.

Finally, consider establishing a mask-distribution program in your immediate area.  Mail-a-Mask, or some such.  People who have them, or have the skills to make them, offering them to their neighbors.