Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hintz right on mask mandate evidence

- Haley BeMiller USA TODAY NETWORK - WISCONSIN

Masks have once again become a political volleyball in the Wisconsin State Capitol.

Assembly Republican­s voted on Feb. 4 to overturn Gov. Tony Evers’ order requiring people to wear face coverings to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 — sealing the deal after the Senate took action a week prior. Evers responded by immediatel­y issuing a new mandate.

The next day, Democrats in the Assembly introduced legislatio­n requiring masks, a measure that is likely to go nowhere in the GOP-controlled Legislatur­e.

Amid the back and forth, Democrats chastised their Republican colleagues for playing politics with public health and argued masks are necessary to push the state through the final stages of the pandemic.

Among those to speak out was Assembly Minority Leader Gordon Hintz.

“At the end of the day, we know mask mandates work,” the Oshkosh Democrat said in a Feb. 5 interview on the Wisconsin Public Television program Here & Now. “There’s enough evidence out there between counties that have done it and counties that haven’t.”

Is Hintz onto something? Let’s take a look.

Mask mandates in Kansas

When asked for evidence to support Hintz’s claim, his office pointed to a study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Kansas Department of Health and Environmen­t that analyzed the impact of mask mandates on Kansas counties.

Face masks

Assembly Minority Leader Gordon Hintz

D-Oshkosh

The statement

“We know mask mandates work. There’s enough evidence out there between counties that have done it and counties that haven’t.”

The verdict

Proven to be an effective tool.

Kansas’ governor issued an executive order requiring face coverings in public spaces starting July 3. A state law enacted the month prior allowed counties to opt out of the state mandate, which 81 of 105 did without implementi­ng their own mask rules.

Researcher­s found the seven-day rolling average of new daily cases per 100,000 people decreased by 6% in the 24 counties with mask mandates after the governor’s order. In counties without a mandate, COVID-19 incidence increased by 100%.

The study noted that 13 counties with mask mandates and seven counties without mandates also had other mitigation strategies in place, such as limiting the size of gatherings and how many could eat in restaurant­s. Still, researcher­s concluded that “strategies related to mask use mandates appear to

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“The decrease in cases among mandated counties and the continued increase in cases in nonmandate­d counties adds to the evidence supporting the importance of wearing masks and implementi­ng policies requiring their use to mitigate the spread of SARS-CoV-2,” the study stated.

Additional research

The Wisconsin Medical Society cited the Kansas study in a Feb. 1 memo to Assembly lawmakers asking them to oppose the repeal.

The group also referenced research from Goldman Sachs estimating that mandates gradually increase the number of people who “always” or “frequently” wear masks by about 25 percentage points, and the number who “always” wear masks by 40 points.

Another study published in June found a “significant decline” in daily COVID-19 cases in states with mask mandates, with the effect increasing over time. Researcher­s cautiously estimated that 230,000 to 450,000 COVID-19 cases may have been averted by May 22 due to the mandates.

Meanwhile, researcher­s in Canada found a 25% to 46% average weekly reduction in new cases in the first few weeks after mandates were adopted, while the number of people who reported always wearing a mask in public increased by about 30 percentage points.

When studying the impact of mask mandates, it’s important to consider whether people follow them and if they’re enforced, said Ajay Sethi, an epidemiolo­gist and associate professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He said it can be difficult to assess mandates individual­ly when they’re issued with other public health guidelines, but he believes the Kansas study offered compelling data on the matter.

“You could argue that with or without a mandate, people might wear a mask because that’s what they do and the mandate is just confirming what they do,” he said. “At the end of the day, an entire county had fewer cases.”

And ultimately, Sethi said, mandates remind people about the importance of wearing face coverings to guard against COVID-19.

“If we didn’t have mandates, would you expect mask use to go up?” he said. “I wouldn’t.”

Our ruling

In a TV interview, Hintz said, “At the end of the day we know mask mandates work. There’s enough evidence out there between counties that have done it and counties that haven’t.”

Multiple studies have suggested mask mandates can lead to a decline in COVID-19 cases. Researcher­s caution that factors like compliance and enforcemen­t should be taken into considerat­ion, but masks have ultimately proven to be an effective tool in combating the virus.

We rate Hintz’s claim True.

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