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			 Guidance 
			on correct use of masks promoted by HSHS Illinois, Memorial Health 
			System, SIU Medicine, Springfield Clinic  Send a link to a friend
 
            
            [January 05, 2021]  
              Masks worn in public to prevent the spread of 
			COVID-19 should cover the bridge of the nose, mouth and chin to be 
			most effective, local health-care providers say. | 
        
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			 The advice comes in the wake of Gov. J.B. 
			Pritzker’s amended statewide stay-at-home order, which began May 1 
			and runs through May 30. The order says people must wear a 
			face-covering or mask when in a public place or when working and 
			unable to maintain a 6-foot social distance. 
 The amended order applies to anyone 2 and older who is “able to 
			medically tolerate a face covering.”
 
 Memorial Health System, HSHS Illinois, Springfield Clinic and SIU 
			Medicine are partnering to share a poster with central Illinois 
			businesses that illustrates how masks and other face-coverings 
			should be worn.
 
			
			 
			Homemade masks and face-coverings can be used to comply with the 
			governor’s order.
 “Because COVID-19 can be spread by people who aren’t exhibiting 
			symptoms, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 
			recommends the use of face-coverings, primarily so wearers don’t 
			unknowingly infect others,” said Gina Carnduff, Memorial Health 
			System director of infection prevention.
 
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            Coverings should be fitted to the wearer’s face, with 
			no gaps. When coverings are worn, the wearer should touch only the 
			loops and ties — not the front, and hands should be washed before 
			and after putting on the coverings, according to the poster. 
            Health officials emphasized the importance of the 
			guidelines in protecting community health. 
 “It is important that we continue to practice social distancing and 
			adhere to the guidelines set forth by the Illinois Department of 
			Public Health and the CDC,” said Dr. Gurpreet Mander, chief 
			physician executive for HSHS Illinois. “These practices are our best 
			defense against the spread of COVID-19."
 
 The CDC website offers tips on how to make a homemade face-coverings 
			and masks from household materials.
 
            [Dean Olsen | Media Relations 
			Consultant | CommunicationsMemorial Health System]
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