Belfast Telegraph

Face masks have played a key role for centuries

Coverings aren’t just a modern idea, as Luke Rix-standing finds out

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The concept of PPE goes back millennia. It’s difficult to identify a starting point for masks, but the concept of face coverings as PPE has been important — and occasional­ly contentiou­s — for generation­s.

In ancient Rome noted naturalist Pliny the Elder suggested using animal bladders to fashion face masks for miners exposed to poisonous lead oxide. Fast forward 1,500 years and Leonardo da Vinci (below) recommende­d placing a wet cloth over nose and mouth to protect against chemical warfare.

Perhaps history’s most recognisab­le medical masks belonged to the so-called ‘plague doctors’ of 17th and 18th century Europe, whose beak-like face furniture would fit as well in a modern horror flick as an historic hospital.

Contempora­ry wisdom held that diseases were spread via ‘miasma’ — noxious, airborne substances emitted by rotting matter — so the beaks would often be packed with aromatic spices and herbs. The theory was flawed, but the masks probably did afford protection to the wearers, if only by being a barrier.

The first crude respirator­s emerged in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, mostly bags fastened over the head, with windows to see through.

Exact provenance is debated, but Scottish chemist John Stenhouse can probably claim the first filter face mask. His invention, of the early 1850s, used charcoal to absorb poisonous gases in the air — and with its ear straps and snug fit over the nose and mouth, looked remarkably similar to the N95 masks used by health workers today.

As the 20th century loomed, and germs replaced miasma at the centre of disease prevention, cloth masks became increasing­ly common among surgeons and doctors in Europe and America. But it would take a pandemic for them to break into the mainstream.

The Spanish Flu pandemic — of 1918-20, and among the deadliest in history — crystallis­ed the importance of face masks in countries across the world.

In the United States, the Red Cross ran a public safety announceme­nt warning that “the man or woman or child who will not wear a mask now is a dangerous slacker”, and public mask-wearing was briefly made mandatory in California.

San Francisco became an intriguing case study, both for contempora­ry scientists and modern historians. While the First World War still raged, the populace viewed masks as patriotic, and adherence was generally high.

Once the war ended, however, enthusiasm for masks collapsed, public officials were photograph­ed with bare faces, and around 2,000 dissidents formed the so-called “Anti-mask League”. The city went on to experience a severe second wave of Spanish Flu.

In the UK, masks were merely advised, and disinforma­tion abounded. In October 1918, Colonel Lowther MP asked the House of Commons, “Is it a fact that a sure preventati­ve against influenza is cocoa taken three times a day?”

Meanwhile, the News of the World’s advice to its readers included instructio­ns to “force yourself to sneeze night and morning” and “eat plenty of porridge”.

In other parts of the world, it was a different story. Masks were already in vogue in China following a plague epidemic in 1910-11, while the Japanese public took to mask-wearing as a civic duty.

Throw in the more recent SARS and MERS pandemics, and the East Asian affinity for mask-wearing has been strong for quite some time.

World War Two brought another wave of face mask wearing, as the British government ordered the distributi­on of 500,000 units to stop packed air raid shelters and tube stations becoming easy prey for flu season.

The 1960s revolution­ised masks once again, with the invention of single-use models. Along with single-use gloves, syringes and more, the masks made up part of what one hospital administra­tor in 1969 called a “a total disposable system”.

Now Covid-19 has brought back reusable masks for the wider population — as eco-friendly, do-it-yourself alternativ­es to mass production, supported by online sewing tutorials.

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