Scottish Daily Mail

So do we really need to start wearing masks all over again?

More infectious strains of Omicron are driving a surge in cases. Now, as other countries start to make face coverings mandatory, experts are divided over whether Britain should do the same

- By THEA JOURDAN

Do You still wear a face mask to go shopping, say, or on public transport? if so, you’re in the minority — but for how long? Millions of us ditched masks in January when the government axed their requiremen­t by law. But against a rising tide of cases, hospital trusts in Cambridges­hire, Hampshire, nottingham­shire, devon and Wales have reinstated guidance urging people to mask-up.

last week, for example, the Royal devon university Healthcare nHS Foundation Trust in Exeter started handing out disposable face masks and antiviral hand gel to all visitors.

‘We moved back to mandatory face masks for all, and i think it’s a sensible move,’ dr david Strain, an honorary consultant in medicine for older adults at the Trust, told good Health.

‘The point is to protect vulnerable patients at a time when one in 20 people in the population has Covid.’

infection rates aren’t just rising in the uK — they are on the march across Europe, fuelled by omicron sub-variants thought to be even more infectious than the BA.2 strain that caused uK cases to soar to a record 4.1 million in April.

government­s are revisiting face mask guidance as a result.

France’s former health minister Brigitte Bourguigno­n recently said people have a ‘civic duty’ to wear masks in crowded places, such as on public transport, at work and in shops; german Chancellor olaf Scholz has warned that face masks ‘will play a bigger role’ in germany in the coming months; and in Australia, dr Kerry Chant, new South Wales chief health officer, last week urged residents to don a mask when they can’t socially distance.

Meanwhile, the government of Cyprus announced it is to make it mandatory for people to wear face masks when indoors.

So should the uK follow suit? Cases are, after all, rocketing — partly because the new strains of omicron, BA.4 and BA.5, appear to be more transmissi­ble than earlier versions.

That’s because changes to the protein on the spike of the virus make it easier for it latch on to host cells, so it is better able to evade immunity from vaccines and previous infections.

The latest office for national Statistics Survey shows around one in 17 people in Scotland had Covid-19 in the week up to June 29, up from one in 18 the week before. The figure equates to around 312,800 people.

Hospital admissions with Covid in Scotland have dropped from a daily average of 149 in the middle of June to 125 on July 3.

Face coverings remained a requiremen­t in nHS premises in Scotland when the rules around masks in public places were relaxed earlier this year. Patients, visitors and staff must still wear face coverings in hospitals and other nHS facilities.

Many gP surgeries, care homes and hospitals throughout the uK have also already brought back the requiremen­t to wear a mask.

But should those rules change not just in healthcare settings, but also for places such as supermarke­ts, cinemas or restaurant­s?

danny Altmann, who is a professor of immunology at imperial College london, believes this is now a necessity. ‘Most of us working on Covid-19 were incredibly surprised that masks have not remained mandatory in healthcare and very strongly advised in other enclosed settings, such as schools or public transport,’ he told good Health.

He wears a mask whenever he is in a public area and in close proximity to others, raising it only to drink or eat. ‘We are in the grip of a major wave and BA.5 is massively more transmissi­ble than the early waves and is causing some quite serious illness,’ he adds.

There isn’t only a risk of illness and hospitalis­ation but also of developing debilitati­ng long Covid, which causes symptoms such as fatigue and brain fog that can last for months, adds Professor Altmann.

‘There have been nearly threequart­ers of a million new long Covid cases during the so-called “mild” omicron wave of 2022. Why would you take the risk of not wearing a mask?’ he says.

it’s a contentiou­s subject — so much so that one consultant surgeon

New variant is causing quite serious illness

We’re in the grip of a major wave. Why risk it?

at a teaching hospital in southern England who opposes the reintroduc­tion of mask-wearing would speak to good Health only on condition of anonymity for fear of criticism from patients and colleagues.

The surgeon said: ‘i know it’s not a popular view, but i think we need to ditch masks unless you are in a medical setting. We have to learn to live with this virus.

‘The fact is that most people will have no symptoms or minor illness if they are infected with Covid, and we have a successful vaccinatio­n programme and drug therapies to relieve more serious symptoms.’

These include antivirals such as nirmatrelv­ir, ritonavir, remdesivir and

molnupirav­ir, which are available to people at risk of getting seriously ill from Covid-19.

This includes people with Down’s syndrome and patients receiving some cancer treatments.

There are, the surgeon says, solid arguments against masks.

‘Mask-wearing can give people a false sense of security so they don’t take precaution­s such as isolating if they have symptoms.

‘Covering faces all the time leads to poorer social interactio­n and people’s ability to recognise and identify others. It can lead to some people feeling isolated, particular­ly the elderly, who may already have difficulty with poor hearing.’

Dr Michael Lewis, a reader in the School of Psychology at Cardiff University, agrees that mask-wearing affects how people interact.

‘Most obviously, it is more difficult to interpret facial expression­s, but this effect is reduced somewhat by people using the top half of their face more in order to communicat­e — for example, people smile with their eyes more when wearing a face mask.’

Children wearing them in school could, however, be affected, he says. ‘Face masks in an educationa­l setting can act as a barrier to learning, but the data is not conclusive on this.’ Mask-wearing can also exacerbate dry eye symptoms, according to a survey in the journal Contact Lens & Anterior Eye, published last January.

People with sensitive skin may develop rashes caused by chemicals used to sterilise disposable masks such as formaldehy­de, according to tests carried out at Hamburg Environmen­tal Institute in April 2021.

Meanwhile, a study concluded that ‘prolonged use of N95 and surgical masks by healthcare profession­als has adverse effects such as headaches, rash, acne and impaired cognition in the majority of those surveyed’, reported the Journal of Infectious Disease Epidemiolo­gy in 2020.

However, for many people, face masks never went away. Around three in ten adults (27 per cent) across the UK reported always or often maintainin­g social distancing, and roughly four in ten (38 per cent) said they wore a face covering when outside their homes, according to ONS figures.

But do they really work? Despite billions of people wearing them to reduce Covid transmissi­on, gold-standard scientific evidence — in other words, randomised controlled trials — remain thin on the ground. Instead, the evidence comes mainly from observatio­nal studies, which look at samples of people without interferin­g or controllin­g them in any way.

According to these studies, there is a benefit to wearing a mask. For example, a review of public health measures published by the BMJ in October 2021, looking at 72 observatio­nal studies of nearly 400,000 participan­ts, found a 53 per cent reduction in Covid-19 incidence from wearing masks.

And a study in the journal Science in May 2021 showed that even home-made masks stopped larger virus-filled droplets being passed on from an infected person wearing a face cover.

However, the type of mask you need varies according to your environmen­t. Yafang Cheng, head of a Minerva Research Group at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, reported that masks became less efficient if the air is full of virus droplets, as in a Covid ward. In this case, more advanced masks (N95/FFP2) would be required.

Most people in the UK wear disposable ‘surgical’ blue masks comprising three layers of synthetic materials that act as a filter to particles and droplets.

As a gerontolog­ist working with elderly patients, Dr Strain wears a higher grade FFP3 mask, which blocks fine particles down to three micrometer­s in size.

‘This type of mask is designed to protect me, not just stop me passing on the virus,’ he says. ‘Most people don’t need such protection, although Germany is moving to FFP2 masks for its entire population, so we shall see.’

Professor Altmann wears a higher grade of mask, and not just on hospital wards.

‘I wear a high-grade N95 mask in any indoor public setting, except when I have to take it down to drink coffee, for example,’ he says. ‘In that situation, I make sure we are well spaced in an airy place.’

An N95 has a filter and the edges form a seal around the nose and mouth. In his opinion, the German move to make these mandatory indoors is the correct one.

‘That’s precisely what we should be doing,’ he says. ‘Sadly, the UK is doing badly: high caseload, antibody levels have waned since the boosters, and a poor rollout and uptake of fourth doses.’

More than five million people in England were invited for a spring booster dose, of which more than four million — about 86 per cent of those aged 75 and over — have had it so far. Those who are eligible include older care home residents, people aged 75 and over and the immunosupp­ressed.

But Dr Strain doesn’t believe masks need to be mandated by law because ‘most people are reasonable enough to put on a mask in a GP surgery, a hospital or on public transport’.

Professor Altmann, however, believes the need to return to mask-wearing is urgent. He says: ‘We are heading through the summer into autumn in a precarious state, and masks could make that marginally better.’

Prolonged use can cause acne and headaches

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