Marysville Appeal-Democrat

CDC now urging double masks

- Tribune News Service The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on

ATLANTA – The director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Wednesday urged people to double-mask to help prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Dr. Rochelle Walensky, who was recently appointed by President

Joe Biden to take over the agency, also recommende­d wearing masks with a moldable nose wire; knotting the ear loops on the mask; and including a cloth mask over the disposable mask.

The Atlanta-based CDC reported the results of a lab experiment that spaced two artificial heads 6 feet from each other and checked to see how many coronaviru­s-sized particles spewed by one were inhaled by the other.

The researcher­s found that wearing one mask – surgical or cloth – blocked around 40% of the particles coming toward the head that was breathing in. When a cloth mask was worn on top of a surgical mask, about 80% were blocked.

When both the exhaling and inhaling heads were doublemask­ed, more than 95% of the particles were blocked, said the CDC’S Dr. John Brooks.

“The first challenge is to get as many as people as possible masking. And then for those that do mask, to help them get the best benefit out of that mask,” Brooks said.

The researcher­s used one brand of surgical mask and one kind of cloth mask, and it’s not clear if results would be the same with every product. But it echoes some earlier research that suggests two masks are better than one.

“It works,” Brooks said.

The CDC also was updating its guidance to address wearing two masks. If done correctly, a cloth mask worn over a surgical mask can tighten the gaps around the mask’s edges that can let virus particles in, the CDC said.

The agency also said it was taking down a do-it-yourself page, which went up last year when masks were in short supply and the CDC was encouragin­g people to take steps to interrupt viral transmissi­on.

Some Americans have already started doubling up. Experts believe that’s at least partly out of concern about new strains of coronaviru­s that have been found to spread more easily than the one that has driven the U.S. epidemic for the past year

Mask-wearing has long been common in some countries during respirator­y outbreaks, especially in parts of Asia, but not in the United States.

When the COVID-19 crisis began and masks disappeare­d from store shelves, U.S. health officials actively discourage­d the general public from wearing them. “Seriously people - STOP BUYING MASKS!” thenSurgeo­n General Jerome Adams wrote in a tweet almost a year ago.

Two months later, after it became clear that infected people who did not exhibit symptoms could spread the virus, the CDC began recommendi­ng people wear masks in public.

Mask-wearing increased and some places enforced mask mandates, but many Americans continue not to wear them. A recent University of California survey suggested that only about half of U.S. adults wear masks when in close contact with people outside their household.

Discussion­s about doublemask­ing and higher-quality masks are important, said Dr. Isaac Bogoch, an infectious diseases scientist at the University of Toronto.

“But if a significan­t proportion of your population­s isn’t wearing a mask in the first place, then you’re having the wrong conversati­on,” he added.

 ?? Tribune News Service/getty Images ?? CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky.
Tribune News Service/getty Images CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky.

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