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Researchers have long known that masks can prevent people from spreading airway germs to others — findings that have driven much of the conversation around these crucial accessories during the coronavirus pandemic.
But now, as cases continue to rise across the country, experts are pointing to an array of evidence suggesting that masks also protect the people wearing them, lessening the severity of symptoms, or in some instances, staving off infection entirely.
Different kinds of masks “block virus to a different degree, but they all block the virus from getting in,” said Dr. Monica Gandhi, an infectious disease physician at the University of California, San Francisco. If any virus particles do breach these barriers, she said, the disease might still be milder.
Dr. Gandhi and her colleagues make this argument in a new paper slated to be published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. Drawing from animal experiments and observations of various events during the pandemic, they contend that people wearing face coverings will take in fewer coronavirus particles, making it easier for their immune systems to bring any interlopers to heel.
Dr. Tsion Firew, an emergency physician at Columbia University who wasn’t involved in the work, cautioned that the links between masking and milder disease haven’t yet been proved as cause and effect. Even so, the new paper “reiterates what we say about masks,” she said. “It’s not just a selfless act.”
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Mask mandates won’t work — unless they are enforced
Francis Suarez, a Republican, is mayor of Miami and vice president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors. Vin Gupta is an assistant professor of health metrics sciences and pulmonary/critical care medicine at the University of Washington Medical Center.
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We are at war with a silent and ruthless enemy, and mask mandates are among our best weapons to win the fight. But they have to have teeth to work.
Facing a global pandemic with flu season on the near horizon, our nation’s governors and mayors must quickly align common sense with the common good. That means balancing personal liberty with the clear and present public health danger presented by the spread of covid-19. We can no longer afford to be confused by false choices and false information....
New study: Masks Block Virus Particles but Not Entirely
Face masks can reduce the spread of airborne particles from respiratory viruses such as COVID-19, but even the most secure professional face coverings don’t eliminate everything, according to a new study published Wednesday in mSphere, an open access journal from the American Society for Microbiology.
Cotton masks, surgical masks and N95 masks reduced the transmission of coronavirus droplets but didn’t completely block all particles, the University of Tokyo research team found. However, the transmission between two people was much less when both people wore masks.
“There was a synergistic effect when both the virus receiver and virus spreader wore masks,” they wrote.
The research team built a secured chamber with two mannequin heads facing each other. One head simulated coughing and expelled actual coronavirus particles. The other head simulated natural breathing, with a collection chamber in the airway to collect virus particles.
When the breathing mannequin had a cotton mask, it reduced transmission between 20% to 40%. An N95 mask blocked 80% to 90% of particles. When the coughing mannequin had a cotton or surgical mask, it reduced transmission by 50%, and the N95 blocked 90%....