Coronavirus masks: A cultural disconnect for Chinese-Americans
LOS ANGELES — Several staff members of a small community health clinic in L.A.'s historic Chinatown spoke on the phone with patients Tuesday while wearing face masks that muffled their voices.
The masks are a recent phenomenon at the clinic, located inside the Chinatown Service Center, a nonprofit community assistance organization that serves mainly Chinese immigrants.
Staffers showed up for work wearing the masks Monday, a day after public health officials confirmed the first two California cases of the new coronavirus, in Los Angeles and Orange counties, said Dr. Felix Aguilar, the clinic's chief medical officer.
“Fear, at this moment, is the greatest epidemic that we have,” Aguilar said.
As China grapples with the growing coronavirus outbreak, Chinese people in the Los Angeles area — home to the thirdlargest Chinese immigrant population in the United States — are encountering a cultural disconnect as they brace for a possible spread of the virus in their adopted homeland.
The use of face masks is common in China, to protect against both germs and pollution. But when Chinese immigrants wear them in the U.S., it often conflicts with guidance from officials, who warn that they offer minimal protection and could lull wearers into a false sense of security. It can also draw suspicious gazes from passersby.
“In the U.S., if you've got a mask, people will sort of look at you like you're doing something unusual, whereas in Asia it's fairly common to do this, and people don't give it a second thought,” said Dr. Bryant Lin, codirector of the Center for Asian Health Research and Education at the Stanford University School of Medicine.
Alhambra Unified School District in Los Angeles County, where a significant proportion of students are from Mandarin-speaking families, is getting a lot of pushback against school rules that ban face masks for students, said Toby Gilbert, a spokesperson for the district.