China Daily (Hong Kong)

Should everyone wear face masks during health crisis?

- The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

Few things are as controvers­ial as wearing face masks in the community during the COVID-19 pandemic. The World Health Organizati­on and the US Centers for Disease Control discourage­d people from wearing masks in public. US Surgeon General Jerome Adams tweeted: “Seriously people — STOP BUYING MASKS!” Asian countries disagreed. The row continues even among medical profession­als on both sides of the Atlantic. With millions of lives at stake, should people wear masks in public?

Surgical masks are designed to prevent transmissi­on of disease droplets. This dreary piece of protective equipment is made of three layers consisting of a core melt-blown polymer sandwiched between non-woven fabrics. The melt-blown material acts as a filter to stop particles from entering or exiting the mask. These particles can include sprays, droplets, bacteria, and viruses. In fact, understand­ing the mode of transmissi­on of SARS-CoV-2 lends credibilit­y to staunch advocates of mask-wearing in public. The impish virus bides in secretions generated from our respirator­y tracts, some deep down our lungs. It clings to droplets produced from an infected person’s cough or sneeze before traveling a few meters in the air. Droplets that reach a healthy person’s eyes, nose, or mouth release the virus particles into his or her respirator­y tract where they replicate and cause illness. In science, efficacy is measured by data and statistics, and effectiven­ess by costbenefi­t weighting. And what is known as evidence today may be supplanted by new evidence as our knowledge increases. Such is the beauty of science — the process of finding the truth. Scientists know (biological) plausibili­ty alone falls short of deducing that “masks work” since 1965, when Sir Austin Bradford Hill proposed eight additional criteria to prove a causal relationsh­ip. Hence, hard evidence of mask-wearing to prevent COVID-19 spreading in the community was considered then to be lacking.

The COVID-19 pandemic invoked upsetting memories of SARS in 2003 in Asia across Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, and parts of the Chinese mainland, during which the majority wore surgical masks in public. Some even wore N95 respirator­s. That epidemic raised hygiene awareness among Southeast Asians and it has since buried the taboo of facial coverage in the community. Many Japanese and Koreans now wear masks to prevent inhaling pollutants. Face-coverage styles abound, and no wearers are scorned for matching their masks with their apparel. As it is self-protective, wearing masks in the community is seen as a socially responsibl­e act, especially when someone is ill. Unfortunat­ely, few in Asia capitalize­d on research opportunit­ies to investigat­e the effectiven­ess of mask-wearing in the community, among other public-health policies, in severing the chains of infection.

Recently, Mark Loeb of McMaster University published an article in Influenza about the protective effects surgical masks and N95 respirator­s have on healthcare workers. He concluded that both were similar when it comes to preventing viral transmissi­ons. The use of N95 respirator­s, specially designed equipment that blocks 95 percent of particles smaller than 0.3 microns, is warranted for circumstan­ces in which aerosols are generated during invasive medical procedures such as intubation. WHO guidelines suggest healthcare workers and caregivers at home should wear surgical masks during routine care for patients. It is, however, a slippery slope to extrapolat­e the effectiven­ess of donning masks by healthcare workers to members of the public. Statistici­ans call it bias. Physicians and nurses learned the steps to take on and off personal protective equipment meticulous­ly to minimize the chances of infection. Without such know-how, the general public may negate the benefits, not least when they contaminat­e their hands when they take off masks or when they reuse them. Expect people to be less

Charles Ng

The author is a licensed doctor in Hong Kong, and a Master of Public Health candidate at Johns Hopkins University. Social distancing and handwashin­g are well-proven. We should closely observe these practices among all the maskwearin­g squabbles for our own benefit.

vigilant about social distancing and hand hygiene as they have a false sense of security, said a health psychologi­st at University College London.

To address this heated debate, Professor Benjamin Cowling at the University of Hong Kong published an article in the latest issue of Nature Medicine, one of the journals with the highest impact factors. It revealed that 30 percent of droplets and 40 percent of aerosols shed by coronaviru­s-infected (bar SARS-CoV-2) patients could drop to zero had they donned a surgical mask. It does not help that personal protective equipment is suffering a global shortage. By inciting panic buying, physicians and nurses who work round-the-clock to save our loved ones and other patients may not get what they need. We are putting our bravest healthcare workers in danger in exchange for peace of mind. As responsibl­e organizati­ons for global health, the WHO and CDC had to draft policies that could benefit most people while factoring in equity and resource constraint­s. No longer. Surgical mask production has increased dramatical­ly. 3M doubled its manufactur­ing capacity without raising the price. China has been exporting protective gear to America, Italy, and other countries in Africa. MIT and Cambridge University hosted hackathons to crowdsourc­e solutions to mend global supply chains of health gear. The CDC has also changed its tone by endorsing homemade cloth facial coverings for the general populace — 30 percent to 50 percent of transmissi­ons occur from asymptomat­ic carriers. How effective cloth coverings are against COVID-19, though, is unknown.

This crisis presents an opportunit­y for researcher­s to conduct studies ad hoc and post hoc. Questions left adrift include the complicati­ons and treatment of COVID-19 for pregnant women, the extent to which each public health policy made a dent on the transmissi­on curve, and the ways in which culture, religion, and behaviors shape infections in society. Above all, social distancing and handwashin­g are well-proven. We should closely observe these practices among all the mask-wearing squabbles for our own benefit.

An absence of evidence should not preclude our personal freedom to take precaution­s. An absence of mask supplies should not diminish our social responsibi­lity to ration scarce resources to those who need them most — poor countries and ethnic minorities deserve the same privileges we have convinced ourselves we are entitled to. As global supply chains are disrupted, our human bonds should strengthen. And our ends should transcend beyond self-means, just as our horizons should broaden across the world. We are all in this together.

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