Last edit by: NewbieRunner
Moderator announcement - June 23, 2020:
Flyertalks moderators generally take a hands-off approach when it comes to judging the accuracy of members statements. While thats fine for travel debates, a pandemic is clearly a more serious issue.
A meta-analysis of 172 studies that looked at various interventions to prevent the transmission of COVID-19, SARS and MERS from an infected person to people close to them, published in The Lancet on June 1, found that mask wearing significantly reduces the risk of viral transmission.
Given the science, the forum moderators are disallowing any further posts that debate whether or not masks should be worn. Posts that do so will be deleted and members subject to discipline.
Please also note, we do not allow posting of conspiracy theories or racist terms used in place of Covid-19, coronavirus, etc.
- Coronavirus and Travel moderator team
Flyertalks moderators generally take a hands-off approach when it comes to judging the accuracy of members statements. While thats fine for travel debates, a pandemic is clearly a more serious issue.
A meta-analysis of 172 studies that looked at various interventions to prevent the transmission of COVID-19, SARS and MERS from an infected person to people close to them, published in The Lancet on June 1, found that mask wearing significantly reduces the risk of viral transmission.
Given the science, the forum moderators are disallowing any further posts that debate whether or not masks should be worn. Posts that do so will be deleted and members subject to discipline.
Please also note, we do not allow posting of conspiracy theories or racist terms used in place of Covid-19, coronavirus, etc.
- Coronavirus and Travel moderator team
Coronavirus and masks/face coverings [Consolidated thread]
#61
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: UK. BAEC AAdvantage
Programs: Mucci Des Oeufs Brouilles et des Canards
Posts: 3,652
This thread got me curious to see what masks are currently available to buy. I think I may start wearing them. Not because of the coronavirus, but rather from a pollution aspect! However having lived and worked nearly 3 decades in Zones 1 and 2 of London I think any damage has probably already been done!

#62
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: 42.1% in PDX , 49.9% in PVG & 8% in the air somewhere
Programs: Marriott Ambassador Elite, UA 1K, AS MVP GLD 75K, DL Pt
Posts: 1,086

#63
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Fuerteventura
Posts: 74
BA crew on one of my flights last week jokingly asked a mask wearing passenger if he was contagious before telling him that the mask he was wearing was pointless.
I was coming back from 5 weeks travelling around South East Asia and on every airline I used the staff wore masks, apart from BA.
I certainly didnt feel the need to wear one. Good and regular hand washing is key. I had some hand sanitiser for when that wasnt always easy out and about.
I was coming back from 5 weeks travelling around South East Asia and on every airline I used the staff wore masks, apart from BA.
I certainly didnt feel the need to wear one. Good and regular hand washing is key. I had some hand sanitiser for when that wasnt always easy out and about.

#65
Moderator: InterContinental Hotels and Germany
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 6,384
I would not be too concerned in regard to your destinations.
I am in Asia and even here is - as mentioned by others - the situation very different. In Taiwan, not wearing a mask in public is the exception. Put aside the usefull / uselessness of wearing a mask, I wear one myself. Especially in crowded undergrounds. In hotels, staff is wearing masks, but most guests do not. But I think this is mandatory right now for them. Some hotels (like the Hilton) put a plastic cover over button ins elevators to easier clean them. Sanitizer bottles were placed in all public places and on every floor.
In Singapore, is was quite different. Not many people wear them in public places. Kuala Lumpur was the same with the only difference that sanitizer were less frequently available in the hotels on floors and in public places.
Staff tend to wear mask as front desk, but not in the exceutive lounge unless doing food services.
In planes, all TG flight attendants wore mask on BKK - TPE. No masks for MH flight attendants on KUL - TPE and KUL - SIN vv. Some wear mask in Economy on TPE - KUL (Business load was low on all flights).
If you want to be on the save side, use a sanitary nap to clean tray tables, seats and button of inlifght entertainment system, scree, seat adjustments. But this could also be a general advice. I wore a mask on KUL - TPE, but given that the air was chilly, that was simply to avoid a cold myself. One passengers wore mask, gloves and cleaned the area around his seat with a packet of sanitizers naps before taking the seat. But he ate without gloves, which made his efforts in my eyes a bit useless.
To sum up - enjoy your travel, just be a bit more carefull it it comes to touching things and your face afterwards with your hand. And do not overreact. Personally, dying on the way to the airport in a car accident is still at a higher risk than getting infected by Coronavirs. But that is of course my own personal point of view.
I am in Asia and even here is - as mentioned by others - the situation very different. In Taiwan, not wearing a mask in public is the exception. Put aside the usefull / uselessness of wearing a mask, I wear one myself. Especially in crowded undergrounds. In hotels, staff is wearing masks, but most guests do not. But I think this is mandatory right now for them. Some hotels (like the Hilton) put a plastic cover over button ins elevators to easier clean them. Sanitizer bottles were placed in all public places and on every floor.
In Singapore, is was quite different. Not many people wear them in public places. Kuala Lumpur was the same with the only difference that sanitizer were less frequently available in the hotels on floors and in public places.
Staff tend to wear mask as front desk, but not in the exceutive lounge unless doing food services.
In planes, all TG flight attendants wore mask on BKK - TPE. No masks for MH flight attendants on KUL - TPE and KUL - SIN vv. Some wear mask in Economy on TPE - KUL (Business load was low on all flights).
If you want to be on the save side, use a sanitary nap to clean tray tables, seats and button of inlifght entertainment system, scree, seat adjustments. But this could also be a general advice. I wore a mask on KUL - TPE, but given that the air was chilly, that was simply to avoid a cold myself. One passengers wore mask, gloves and cleaned the area around his seat with a packet of sanitizers naps before taking the seat. But he ate without gloves, which made his efforts in my eyes a bit useless.
To sum up - enjoy your travel, just be a bit more carefull it it comes to touching things and your face afterwards with your hand. And do not overreact. Personally, dying on the way to the airport in a car accident is still at a higher risk than getting infected by Coronavirs. But that is of course my own personal point of view.

#66
Moderator: InterContinental Hotels and Germany
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 6,384

#67
Join Date: Nov 2017
Posts: 378
Surprisingly no one appeared to be wearing masks on my half-full (or half-empty, depending on your outlook) BA11 LHR-SIN flight last week, including no crew doing so. I saw one couple pop them on when leaving the aircraft. Also surprisingly very few wearing them in the airport. Plenty on my subsequent SQ flight to Oz with most crew doing so.

#68
Join Date: Nov 2016
Programs: BAEC Gold
Posts: 454
Surprisingly no one appeared to be wearing masks on my half-full (or half-empty, depending on your outlook) BA11 LHR-SIN flight last week, including no crew doing so. I saw one couple pop them on when leaving the aircraft. Also surprisingly very few wearing them in the airport. Plenty on my subsequent SQ flight to Oz with most crew doing so.

#69
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: GLA
Programs: BAEC: Silver. Nothing else as TopCashBack trumps all hotel programs
Posts: 801
Well, I'm flying to, through and around London today. While I'm not going to wear a mask I am going to pop a few pairs of disposable surgical gloves in my bag. Might seem extreme and look bizare paired with a suit but I think I'm going to wear them through security and any other high contact areas. The amount of people who touch those security trays!
I might look a bit silly but I can live with that to be honest.

I might look a bit silly but I can live with that to be honest.

#70
Join Date: Dec 2001
Posts: 1,003


#71
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Singapore - the hot, little red dot
Programs: BA, SQ
Posts: 860
Well, I'm flying to, through and around London today. While I'm not going to wear a mask I am going to pop a few pairs of disposable surgical gloves in my bag. Might seem extreme and look bizare paired with a suit but I think I'm going to wear them through security and any other high contact areas. The amount of people who touch those security trays! 
I might look a bit silly but I can live with that to be honest.

I might look a bit silly but I can live with that to be honest.

Funniest thing is when her husband pulls down his mask, she berates him to say that everybody is looking at him for pulling it down. Err no I think everybody is actually looking at you for your getup and drawing attention to yourself

Doesn't end after the flight either, so we get off the flight and there's a sanitising spray which she uses while her gloves are still on, ok weird. Then we get to immigration and now she has to take her gloves off and use the finger print scanner, so out comes her own hand sanitiser and then after those machines are once again hand sanitisers which she uses. I'm chuckling all the way and the husband by now has removed his mask and she berates him one more time for the road, saying how do you expect a taxi to let us in the cab without a mask...

At this point I've had my fill of entertainment and zoom past them. Serious case of the Covid-19 OCDs


#72
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: GLA
Programs: BAEC: Silver. Nothing else as TopCashBack trumps all hotel programs
Posts: 801
So last night I'm on a flight from LGW to SIN, and this Asian couple who take their seats near to me and the wife has taken things way way to the extreme. They were the last to board and she comes on with the mask OK fine, perhaps 3 other people on the plane are wearing one, BUT she's also got lab goggles on and wearing surgical gloves 
Funniest thing is when her husband pulls down his mask, she berates him to say that everybody is looking at him for pulling it down. Err no I think everybody is actually looking at you for your getup and drawing attention to yourself
Doesn't end after the flight either, so we get off the flight and there's a sanitising spray which she uses while her gloves are still on, ok weird. Then we get to immigration and now she has to take her gloves off and use the finger print scanner, so out comes her own hand sanitiser and then after those machines are once again hand sanitisers which she uses. I'm chuckling all the way and the husband by now has removed his mask and she berates him one more time for the road, saying how do you expect a taxi to let us in the cab without a mask...
At this point I've had my fill of entertainment and zoom past them. Serious case of the Covid-19 OCDs

Funniest thing is when her husband pulls down his mask, she berates him to say that everybody is looking at him for pulling it down. Err no I think everybody is actually looking at you for your getup and drawing attention to yourself

Doesn't end after the flight either, so we get off the flight and there's a sanitising spray which she uses while her gloves are still on, ok weird. Then we get to immigration and now she has to take her gloves off and use the finger print scanner, so out comes her own hand sanitiser and then after those machines are once again hand sanitisers which she uses. I'm chuckling all the way and the husband by now has removed his mask and she berates him one more time for the road, saying how do you expect a taxi to let us in the cab without a mask...

At this point I've had my fill of entertainment and zoom past them. Serious case of the Covid-19 OCDs





Last edited by cupsandsaucers; Feb 24, 20 at 3:18 am

#73
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: UK/Australia
Programs: BAEC Silver, UA2MM, QF Platinum, VA Platinum.
Posts: 2,438
Well, this thread has raised a lot of interesting points.
My partner and I already have a stock of N95 masks because of the recent thick bushfire smoke in our region. We are booked to travel to the Pacific islands, south east Asia and the middle east next month, and would certainly be taking them with us to wear when considered appropriate (that's for us to decide).
However, with the wider spread of the virus and the impossibility of knowing who you will sit or stand near, we have decided to cancel our trips. I take the point that there appears to be only a small risk of catching the virus, but as we are over 60 and have minor ailments that go with the territory (such as hypertension) we are immediately in a higher risk category.
And you can take all the precautions you like in terms of hand sanitation, etc, but if some infected person coughs or sneezes close by, it's all for nought, as I discovered a few years ago with the flu, where I ended up very close to death's door. At least with flu you can get a vaccination that will give you a fighting chance of avoiding it.
But, each to their own. It's a personal choice.
My partner and I already have a stock of N95 masks because of the recent thick bushfire smoke in our region. We are booked to travel to the Pacific islands, south east Asia and the middle east next month, and would certainly be taking them with us to wear when considered appropriate (that's for us to decide).
However, with the wider spread of the virus and the impossibility of knowing who you will sit or stand near, we have decided to cancel our trips. I take the point that there appears to be only a small risk of catching the virus, but as we are over 60 and have minor ailments that go with the territory (such as hypertension) we are immediately in a higher risk category.
And you can take all the precautions you like in terms of hand sanitation, etc, but if some infected person coughs or sneezes close by, it's all for nought, as I discovered a few years ago with the flu, where I ended up very close to death's door. At least with flu you can get a vaccination that will give you a fighting chance of avoiding it.
But, each to their own. It's a personal choice.

#74
Ambassador, British Airways Executive Club, easyJet and Ryanair
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: UK/Las Vegas
Programs: BA Gold (GGL/CCR)
Posts: 15,624
There is an interesting piece on this topic by National Geographic, it's a short piece and the title itself actually provides adequate synopsis:
Heres how coronavirus spreads on a planeand the safest place to sit
Heres how coronavirus spreads on a planeand the safest place to sit

#75
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: GLA
Programs: BAEC: Silver. Nothing else as TopCashBack trumps all hotel programs
Posts: 801
Just been through GLA on way the LGW. No sign of any masks or gloves or anything other than "business as usual". Plane is notably considerably less than full though. That's fairly unusual.
