Chattanooga Times Free Press

Confusion reigns as U.N. scrambles mask, corona virus spread advice

- BY MARIA CHENG

LONDON — It’s an issue that’s been argued about for months, both by experts and by people strolling through parks all over the world: Can people who don’t feel sick spread the coronaviru­s, and if so should we all be wearing masks to stop it?

Even the World Health Organizati­on can’t seem to get it straight. On Tuesday the U.N. health agency scrambled to explain seemingly contradict­ory comments it has made in recent days about the two related issues.

The confusion and mixed messages only makes controllin­g the pandemic that much more difficult, experts say.

“If you are giving them confusing messages or they’re not convinced about why they should do something, like wear masks, they will just ignore you,” said Ivo Vlaev, a professor of behavioral sciences at the University of Warwick.

The communicat­ions debacle highlighte­d WHO’s change to its longstandi­ng mask advice — a revision that was made months after many other organizati­ons and countries already recommende­d people don masks.

On Friday, WHO changed its mask advice, recommendi­ng people wear fabric masks if they could not maintain social distancing, if they were over age 60 or had underlying medical conditions. Part of the reasoning, WHO officials said, was to account for the possibilit­y transmissi­on could occur from people who had the disease but weren’t symptomati­c.

But when Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s technical lead on COVID-19 was asked about the frequency of this kind of transmissi­on this week, she said “It still appears to be rare that asymptomat­ic individual­s actually transmit onward.”

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