Kashmir Observer

Double-Masking Can Be Potent To Protect People From Covid: Study

-

A new study by the University of North Carolina Health Care shows that wearing two face coverings can nearly double the effectiven­ess of filtering out SARS-CoV-2-sized particles, preventing them from reaching the wearer's nose and mouth and causing COVID-19.

The findings published in JAMA Internal Medicine also states that the reason for the enhanced filtration is not about adding too many layers of cloth but eliminatin­g any gaps or poor-fitting areas of a mask.

"The medical procedure masks are designed to have very good filtration potential based on their material, but the way they fit our faces isn't perfect," said Emily Sickbert-Bennett, PhD, associate professor of infectious diseases at the UNC School of Medicine and lead author of the study.

To test the fitted filtration efficiency (FFE) of a range of masks, UNC researcher­s worked with James Samet, PhD, and colleagues in the USEPA Human Studies Facility on the campus of UNCChapel Hill. There they filled a 10-foot by 10-foot stainless-steel exposure chamber with small salt particle aerosols and had researcher­s don combinatio­ns of masks to test how effective they were at keeping particles out of their breathing space.

Each individual mask or layered mask combinatio­n was fitted with a metal sample port, which was attached to tubing in the exposure chamber that measured the concentrat­ion of particles entering the breathing space underneath the researcher's mask. A second tube measured the ambient concentrat­ion of particles in the chamber. By measuring particle concentrat­ion in the breathing space underneath the mask compared to that in the chamber, researcher­s determined the FFE.

"We also had the researcher­s in the chamber undergo a series of range-of-motion activities to simulate the typical motions a person may do throughout their day -bending at the waist, talking, and looking left, right, up and down," said Phillip Clapp, PhD, an inhalation toxicologi­st in the UNC School of Medicine who has been testing mask FFE with Sickbert-Bennett since the pandemic began.

According to their findings, the baseline fitted filtration efficiency (FFE) of a mask differs from person to person, due to each person's unique face and mask fit. But generally, a procedure mask without altering the fit is about 40-60 per cent effective at keeping COVID19-sized particles out. A cloth mask is about 40 per cent effective.

Their recent findings on doubling of face masks show that when a cloth mask is placed over a surgical mask, the FFE improved by about 20 per cent, and improved even more with a snug-fitting, sleeve-type mask, such as a gaiter. When layered over procedure masks, cloth masks improve fit by eliminatin­g gaps and holding the procedure mask closer to the face, consistent­ly covering the nose and mouth. When a procedure mask is worn over a cloth mask, FFE improved by 16 per cent.

"We've found that wearing two loosely fitted masks will not give you the filtration benefit that one, snug-fitting procedure mask will," Sickbert-Bennett said. "And with the current data supporting how effective mask-wearing is at preventing the spread of COVID-19, the best kind of doublemask­ing is when you and the person you are interactin­g with are each correctly wearing a very snug-fitting mask."

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India