Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Wearing masks could help prevent major illness even if you get COVID-19

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

As health experts urge the public to wear masks to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s, they continue to get pushback. Among the arguments of skeptics: If masks can’t fully protect me against COVID-19, what is the point of wearing them?

Scientists’ counterarg­ument is that masks can help reduce the severity of the disease caused by coronaviru­s even if you get infected.

There’s now mounting evidence that silent spreaders are responsibl­e for the majority of transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s – making universal masking essential to slow the spread of the highly contagious virus, experts say.

This makes the coronaviru­s different from the seasonal flu. With seasonal flu, peak infectious­ness occurs about one day after the onset of symptoms. But with the coronaviru­s, even among people who do end up becoming visibly sick, peak infectious­ness can occur before they show symptoms.

In fact, experts say, significan­t amounts of virus can start coming out of people’s noses and mouths even when they feel well.

This is a key reason, they say, why tactics to deal with the coronaviru­s must be markedly different than with the seasonal flu. And the universal wearing of masks is key. Here’s a Q&A based on research and interviews with medical experts.

– What’s the point of wearing a cloth face covering if it doesn’t filter out everything?

Cloth face masks still provide a major protective benefit: They filter out a majority of viral particles.

As it turns out, that’s pretty important. Breathing in a small amount of virus may lead to no disease or a more mild infection. But inhaling a huge volume of virus particles can result in serious disease or death.

That’s the argument Dr. Monica Gandhi, University of California, San Francisco professor of medicine and medical director of the HIV Clinic at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, is making about why – if you do become infected with the virus – masking can still protect you from more severe disease.

“There is this theory that facial masking reduces the (amount of virus you get exposed to) and disease severity,” said Gandhi, who is also director for the Center for AIDS Research at UC San Francisco.

– What evidence supports this theory?

The idea that a lower dose of virus means less severe illness is a well-worn idea in medicine.

Even going back to 1938, there was a study showing that by giving mice a higher dose of a deadly virus, the mice were more likely to get severe disease and die, Gandhi said.

The same principle applies to humans. A study published in 2015 gave healthy volunteers varying doses of a flu virus; those who got higher doses got sicker, with more coughing and shortness of breath, Gandhi said.

And another study suggested that the reason the second wave of the 1918-19 flu pandemic was the deadliest in the U.S. was because of the overcrowde­d conditions in Army camps as World War I wound down. “In 1918, the Army camps (were) characteri­zed by a high number of contacts between people and by a high case-fatality rate, sometimes 5 to 8 times higher than the case-fatality rate among civilian communitie­s,” the study said.

Finally, a study published in May found that surgical mask partitions significan­tly reduced the transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s among hamsters. And even if the hamsters protected by the mask partitions acquired the coronaviru­s, “they were more likely to get very mild disease,” Gandhi said.

 ?? Los Angeles Times/tns ?? People, wearing masks against the coronaviru­s, shop along Alvarado Street in Macarthur Park in Los Angeles on July 19.
Los Angeles Times/tns People, wearing masks against the coronaviru­s, shop along Alvarado Street in Macarthur Park in Los Angeles on July 19.

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