Calgary Herald

Use face shields, experts urge

MIGHT LOOK ‘DORKY,’ BUT THEY’RE COMFORTABL­E, EASY TO CLEAN AND CAN BE ‘REUSED INDEFINITE­LY’

- SHARON KIRKEY

It took nearly two months for Canada’s federal health leaders to come around to the case for face mask use en masse, when physical distancing is an issue, to curb COVID-19’S spread. Some experts are now suggesting we go further, with goggles or face shields, even if they make people look, as some have observed, a bit “dorky.”

World Health Organizati­on officials said this week its infection prevention control network is discussing face shields. A University of Iowa team is already urging their adoption.

If added to the bundle of other public health measures, simple face shields cobbled together with materials found in craft and office supply stores could help drive COVID-19 infections to manageable levels, the Iowa researcher­s wrote in JAMA.

Layered cloth masks can filter some of the tiny, virus-sized particles that fly out when people cough, sneeze, talk or breathe. But face shields, the Iowa team said, may be a superior option.

Shields can be easily cleaned with soap and water, or household disinfecta­nts, and “reused indefinite­ly.” They’re comfortabl­e to wear, block the virus from entering “portals,” (mouths, noses and eyes) and “reduce the potential for auto-inoculatio­n,” meaning implanting the virus into our own bodies after touching a contaminat­ed surface, by preventing the wearer from touching his or her face.

We can also see each other through them.

Another review published in The Lancet suggested face shields, visors or goggles might significan­tly reduce the chance of viral infection or transmissi­on, from 16 per cent with no eye covering, to six per cent. The World Health Organizati­on commission­ed the review, which synthesize­d all available evidence on physical distancing, mask wearing and eye protection.

The studies weren’t randomized, most reported on SARS or MERS, not SARS-COV-2, they involved mostly health-care settings, and the authors said they can’t be “overly certain in the precise quantitati­ve estimates of effects.” Still, they concluded that, for the general public, physical distancing of more than one metre is “highly effective” (distances of two metres, even better), face masks protect people against infection and that eye protection, while “typically under-considered” can confer added benefit. None of them, they stressed, give complete protection.

“We label the evidence about eye protection as low certainty, meaning any effects are suggestion­s,” scientific lead Derek Chu, a clinician scientist at Mcmaster University, said in an email. The exact risk of transmissi­on varies between studies, he said, and it’s “not yet clear the relative contributi­on of eyes, versus nose vs. mouth.” It’s impossible to say how large the effect might be, he said. While SARS-COV-2 is spread by breathing in tiny liquid virus-containing droplets, there is evidence it can enter the body through mucus membranes, including the mucus membranes on the surface of the eye and inner eye lids.

Pink eye, or conjunctiv­itis, has been reported as a possible sign of COVID-19. A brief report involving 38 people with COVID-19 in Hubei province, China, found “ocular abnormalit­ies” consistent with conjunctiv­itis in one-third of them. “Although there is a low prevalence of SARSCOV-2 in tears,” the authors wrote in JAMA Ophthalmol­ogy, “it is possible to transmit the virus via the eyes.”

On Thursday, Canada’s chief public health officer, Dr. Theresa Tam, said goggles or face shields are worth considerin­g for vulnerable people in particular. The idea behind non-medical masks is to protect others, from you. However, “if you happen to encounter the respirator­y droplet right next to you, and it lands in your eye, that is a potential risk,” Tam said. Wearing a non-medical mask is one layer of protection in crowded places like public transit, she said. “If we want to protect, for example, the elderly themselves then covering the eyes is an important concept.”

There’s been no randomized trial of face shields versus cloth masks. However, one 2014 study suggested face shields can keep people from inhaling 96 per cent of flu-laden droplets immediatel­y after a cough, when standing within 18 inches of someone coughing.

When the study was repeated at today’s recommende­d six-feet of physical distancing separation, the shields blocked inhaled virus by 92 per cent, which, according to the Iowa team, is “similar to distancing alone and reinforces the importance of physical distancing in preventing viral respirator­y infections.”

Goggles have been shown to reduce transmissi­on of infectious diseases, including SARS.

Speaking at a media briefing this week in Geneva, Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove, head of WHO’S emerging diseases and zoonosis unit said there’s a role for face shields if masks aren’t available. “But that’s something that needs to be discussed on where and when (shields) can be best used.” Among the concerns is that face shields lack a good seal, and it’s not clear how effective they are at “source control” — how good they are at stopping viral droplets from being coughed or sneezed out by someone who is infected but has no symptoms.

“I should remind you that masks alone will not protect you. Face shields alone will not protect you from infection,” Van Kerkhove said. All measures, including physical distancing, remain “really paramount,” she said.

Dr. Isaac Bogoch is a big fan of face shields. “They’re far more comfortabl­e to wear, there’s no breathing issues with them, they’re not uncomforta­ble on hot summer days,” said Bogoch, an infectious diseases specialist with Toronto’s University Health Network, who is seeing more people on the streets wearing face shields. “They definitely cover the eyes, the nose and the mouth. You’re less likely to touch your face, because you’ve got a shield on,” Bogoch said.

“The other beautiful aspect of them is that there are no issues with verbal and non-verbal communicat­ion. You can see people’s faces right through them. The psychologi­cal and social benefits are significan­t.”

We don’t yet know if face shields are better, worse or equivalent to face masks. That’s being studied, Bogoch said. “I’m not here to tell people what to do. I’m here to help people make informed decisions for themselves. But I think we should at least be open-minded to it.”

 ?? PETER J THOMPSON/NATIONAL POST ?? A cyclist in Toronto Thursday wears a mask, head scarf and face shield. A review published in the medical journal Lancet suggests shields, visors or goggles might significan­tly reduce the chance of viral infection or transmissi­on.
PETER J THOMPSON/NATIONAL POST A cyclist in Toronto Thursday wears a mask, head scarf and face shield. A review published in the medical journal Lancet suggests shields, visors or goggles might significan­tly reduce the chance of viral infection or transmissi­on.

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