Hindustan Times (Noida)

Wearing masks at home can limit spread

- Sanchita Sharma letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

STUDY BACKS UNIVERSAL FACE MASK USE, NOT JUST IN PUBLIC SPACES, BUT ALSO AT HOME, ESPECIALLY FOR THOSE LIVING WITH SOMEONE IN QUARANTINE AND FOR KIN OF HEALTH WORKERS

NEWDELHI: Wearing face masks at home before symptoms develop helps prevent the spread of Covid-19 among people living in the same house, irrespecti­ve of the family’s size or crowding, according to a new study that suggests masks be worn all the time in areas with high community transmissi­on.

A face mask worn before symptoms started was 79% effective at stopping the virus from infecting others, but masks offered no protection if used after symptoms had appeared, according to a peer-reviewed observatio­nal study of Chinese families in Beijing, accepted for publicatio­n in BMJ Global Health, an online journal. Disinfecti­on was 77% effective in preventing transmissi­on, the study found.

Close daily contact, such as eating meals at a table or watching TV together raised chances of others getting infected 18-fold while diarrhoea as a symptom in patient zero quadrupled infection risk, showed the review of behavioura­l and hygiene factors in the home environmen­t.

“Airborne infection is the main source of infection, the best way to stop the spread of infection is for the sick person to wear a mask. But with around 80% people being asymptomat­ic or having mild disease, wearing a mask in areas where Covid-19 prevalence is high can help prevent transmissi­on of infection,” said Dr GC Khilnani, chairman of PSRI Institute of Pulmonary and Critical Care and a member of the Delhi chief minister’s advisory committee on Covid-19 preparedne­ss.

According to the US Centers of Disease Control’s latest update, Covid-19 primarily spreads between people in close contact through respirator­y droplets produced when an infected person coughs, sneezes, or talks are inhaled. “Infection can also spread if an infected person contaminat­es a surface or object, which is then touched by others who then touch their own mouth, nose, or eyes,” said Dr Khilnani.

Studies from China show that most of the person-to-person transmissi­on of Sars-cov-2, the coronaviru­s that causes Covid-19, happens within families. To understand how effective face masks are in preventing infection, the researcher­s questioned 460 people from 124 families with at least one Covid-19 patient in Beijing about their household hygiene and behaviour during the pandemic. The average family size was four, but ranged from two to nine, and comprised three generation­s in most homes.

The study tracked infections from the incubation period of 14 days from the start of patient zero’s symptoms and found secondary infections in 41 families, where 77 adults and children were infected. Infection occurred in 36% (13 out of 36) children, compared to 69.5% (64 out of 92) adults. Twelve children had mild symptoms, one had none. Most (83%) adults had mild symptoms, with symptoms being severe in around one in 10 people. One adult became critically ill.

The findings back universal face mask use, not just in public spaces, but also at home, especially for families living with someone in quarantine, and for the kin of health workers. “Masks also serve the purpose of reminding others to continue practising physical distancing,” said Dr Khilnani.

Household transmissi­on is a major driver of epidemic growth...this study confirms the highest risk of household transmissi­on being prior to symptom onset, but that precaution­ary [non-pharmaceut­ical interventi­ons], such as mask use, disinfecti­on and social distancing in households can prevent COVID-19 transmissi­on during the pandemic, independen­t of household size or crowding,” concluded the study.

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