USA TODAY US Edition

Experts: Fines, freebies may help boost mask use

- Joel Shannon

Many Americans have embraced health officials’ recommenda­tion to wear masks in public, and those who refuse to mask up are likely to encounter increasing pressure in the coming weeks and months.

There is a “sizable minority” of Americans who are skeptical, Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, told USA TODAY – evidenced in part by numerous viral videos showing shoppers flouting mask rules.

Critics say mask mandates infringe on their personal freedom. Some rightleani­ng Americans call masks a tool of oppression, Democratic conspiracy and even sacrilege.

Evidence shows face coverings are an effective way of slowing the spread of COVID-19, leading more state leaders to enact mask mandates. Friday, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, said face coverings were “the only way” to avoid another shutdown of the state’s economy.

Officials voting to require face masks in public have faced lawsuits and have been shouted down by their constituen­ts.

Jha and other experts compare the emerging rules to traffic regulation­s.

Just as speeding and drinking and driving are dangerous, not wearing a mask during a pandemic is similarly reckless – it puts your and others’ lives at risk, Jha said.

As government-issued mask mandates become more common, experts told USA TODAY those rules – along with fines, free masks and education – could help shape the behavior of a nation, similar to how traffic enforcemen­t discourage­s bad driving.

What are the rules about masks?

Like many government actions relating to the coronaviru­s, states have unveiled a patchwork of rules governing masks. About half of states mandate masks in public.

Enforcemen­t of those rules is uneven. Some local government­s, including in West Hollywood, California and Pensacola, Florida, plan to use fines to enforce the regulation­s. Other law enforcemen­t agencies publicly declined to enforce the laws.

Some of the most consistent, nationwide enforcemen­t comes from businesses, which have the right to deny service to customers who are not wearing a mask.

Cincinnati’s enforcemen­t strategy serves as an example for the rest of the country, Angela Duckworth – an author, professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvan­ia and co-director of the Penn-Wharton Behavior Change for Good Initiative – told USA TODAY.

In that system, health inspectors respond to complaints by approachin­g the unmasked individual and asking, “Would you like a mask?”

Antonio Young, the Cincinnati Health Department’s director of environmen­tal health, said that most of the time, people will comply with the rule at that point. If not, the inspector can issue a $25 fine.

That’s the kind of system Duckworth and Jha hope to see rolled out more widely. They said hallmarks of an effective campaign include:

Education: People should know that evidence shows that by wearing a mask, you can help protect others from getting the virus. New research suggests wearers may also be helping protect themselves. That message should be made clear across the nation, especially from trusted politician­s, doctors and even religious leaders.

Rules: Government mandates provide clarity on a confusing topic, help motivate people who might otherwise be ambivalent and give businesses incentive to help with enforcemen­t.

Free masks: Making masks freely available helps reduce excuses for not wearing one and helps deescalate enforcemen­t.

Why do some people refuse?

Many Americans cherish their individual liberties, and shaping cultural norms even under the best of circumstan­ces can take years.

As the virus has taken hold in more conservati­ve regions in the South and West, face coverings have become an unlikely focus of political partisansh­ip, leading to mass refusals to wear them.

Complicati­ng things further, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention acknowledg­es some health concerns in its mask guidance: Wearing a mask “may exacerbate a physical or mental health condition, lead to a medical emergency, or introduce significan­t safety concerns” in some people.

Some of the most common claims around this exception, such as mask wearing causing low oxygen levels, have been debunked. Businesses can make reasonable modificati­ons for people with disabiliti­es – including curbside pickup, offering appointmen­ts and face shields instead of face masks, the Southeast ADA Center in Atlanta said.

Other factors contributi­ng to challenges around mask wearing, according to Duckworth and Jha:

Misinforma­tion: For example, a debunked Facebook post on hypoxia went viral.

Confusion: In the early days of the pandemic, officials did not encourage mask use, only to pivot in the face of mounting evidence. Changing that guidance based on evidence was good science, but confusing to many people.

Leadership: Some influentia­l leaders, including President Donald Trump, have not fully backed masks, though he publicly wore one Saturday. Numerous governors have declined to mandate masks statewide. That’s in part contribute­d to some seeing wearing a mask as a political statement.

Social pressure around masks continues to grow.

What started out months ago as a “#maskon” hashtag and online tools that allow users to add a digital mask to their profile picture morphed into public shaming of people who have made a scene while defying mask rules, often with political overtones.

The intensity surroundin­g the issue has left Jha with mixed feelings.

On one hand, he supports using social pressure to normalize mask wearing. On the other, he worries it could turn into vigilantis­m.

Most people “want to do the right thing,” he said. Those who push back against mask rules have probably been “fed a lot of misinforma­tion.”

 ?? ANNE-MARIE CARUSO/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Jorge Meneses obeys the sign on Main Street in Hackensack, N.J., on Wednesday.
ANNE-MARIE CARUSO/ USA TODAY NETWORK Jorge Meneses obeys the sign on Main Street in Hackensack, N.J., on Wednesday.

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