Save N95s for pros, says Blaz
New York City residents should cover their faces with scarves, bandannas or clothing when in public to stop the spread of coronavirus, Mayor de Blasio said Thursday.
But Hizzoner said surgical and N95 masks should be reserved for health care providers, first responders and those on the front lines of the pandemic.
“We’re advising New Yorkers to wear a face covering when you are going outside and are near other people,” de Blasio said at a briefing Thursday. “It could be a scarf, it could be something you create yourself at home. It could be a bandanna. It does not — not — need to be a professional surgical mask … Don’t use those … leave those alone.”
Health Commissioner Dr. Oxiris Barbot recommended cloth face coverings, “the less fancy, the better.” But she said the city wouldn’t stop anyone from wearing surgical and N95 face masks, even if health care workers are the most in need.
The coverings should be used for a day and washed with soap and water, according to Barbot, and no one should share them.
Barbot said children should use face coverings and that making them was “an opportunity to teach them about COVID-19,” as well as “instill in them the role that these face masks play as part of our civic responsibility.”
City officials stressed that face coverings shouldn’t replace social distancing and that New Yorkers should continue to keep 6 feet from others.
“These face coverings are not a substitution for all of the layers of prevention we have been talking about,” Barbot said.