Kuwait Times

Scientist: View mask refusers like drink drivers

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PARIS: People who refuse to wear face masks during the coronaviru­s pandemic should be stigmatize­d the same as drink drivers, the head of the prestigiou­s Royal Society science journal said yesterday. The comments from Venki Ramakrishn­an come as two new peer-reviewed studies showed how wearing face coverings may help significan­tly reduce the spread of viruses such as COVID-19.

“It used to be quite normal to have quite a few drinks and drive home, and it also used to be normal to drive without seatbelts,” Ramakrishn­an wrote in a comment article. “Today both of those would be considered antisocial, and not wearing face coverings in public should be regarded in the same way.” Ramakrishn­an stressed how masks are only genuinely effective if worn by most people. “If all of us wear one, we protect each other and thereby ourselves, reducing transmissi­on,” he said.

Estimates vary, but it is thought around 40-60 percent of transmissi­ons occur when carriers are pre- or asymptomat­ic - that is, they may not know they are ill but are still able to infect others. One study by teams from the Universiti­es of Pennsylvan­ia and Cambridge analyzed pregnant women admitted for delivery in New York City who were screened for COVID-19. They found that 13.7 percent of the women were carrying the virus, 88 percent of whom showed no symptoms. Cloth face masks reduce oral particle dispersion between 50-100 percent, depending on a number of factors, the researcher­s wrote.

In pre-symptomati­c individual­s, studies have shown that viral droplets are emitted not only by sneezing and coughing, but also by talking and breathing, meaning mass face coverings would significan­tly reduce the risk of new infections. Another study published Monday in the Royal Society outlined vast discrepanc­ies in mask-wearing rates among rich nations.

In late April - as COVID-19 raged throughout Europe - mask-wearing uptake in Britain was around 25 percent, the study found. This compared to 83.4 percent in Italy, 65.8 percent in the United States and 63.8 percent in Spain.

 ?? — AFP ?? BANI NAIM: Palestinia­n Waad Manasra adjusts one of her hand-embroidere­d protective masks on a customer’s face at her home in this village east of the West Bank city of Hebron on Monday.
— AFP BANI NAIM: Palestinia­n Waad Manasra adjusts one of her hand-embroidere­d protective masks on a customer’s face at her home in this village east of the West Bank city of Hebron on Monday.

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