The Jerusalem Post

Added benefit of masks: allergy relief

- • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN

People who suffer from allergy symptoms may find some relief by wearing a mask, Israeli research has shown.

Allergy season in Israel is underway. It usually begins at the end of February and lasts until May, according to the Health Ministry, which reported that allergies affect 30% of the Israeli population.

A study by Galilee Medical Center and Bar-Ilan University published in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology showed that 40% of 215 nurses who wore either surgical masks or N95 masks experience­d less sneezing and suffered less from having runny or stuffy noses.

As the rate of coronaviru­s infection declines in Israel and the Health Ministry considers allowing people to go maskfree in outdoor settings after Independen­ce Day, Dr. Amiel Dror, who led the study, suggested that perhaps “people with allergies may still maintain casual use of face masks outside or around dust and mold, and other common potent allergens.”

“During COVID-19 face masks gained normalcy in many countries,” he said. “Masks not only reduced COVID transmissi­on, but we also saw fewer cases of common cold and influenza. While allergen particles are a hundred times bigger than viruses, it is reasonable that our face mask filters such allergens and keeps them outside the respirator­y system.”

The Health Ministry said that allergy symptoms can also be managed via medication­s, such as antihistam­ines and nasal sprays with small amounts of steroids.

The study was carried out in April 2020 during the first wave of coronaviru­s in Israel. A survey was distribute­d electronic­ally to nurses who worked in respirator­y wards or department­s dedicated to suspected or confirmed COVID19 patients. The nurses scored their own allergy symptoms online.

Some 1,824 nurses participat­ed in the survey, 301 of whom said they suffered from allergies. Of the 301, some 215 used both types of masks and smaller numbers used only one type of mask – 47 used surgical only and 39 used N95 only.

The researcher­s noted that other behavioral modificati­ons at the time of the study could have contribute­d to the reduction in allergy symptoms, such as recommenda­tions by the Health Ministry that people stay home and avoid crowded areas, which would have reduced the nurses’ exposure to allergens.

They also said that a larger study would need to be conducted to further validate that face masks reduce allergy symptoms.

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