The Morning Call (Sunday)

Study: Masking in schools did work

Mandates linked to reduced number of COVID-19 cases

- By Roni Caryn Rabin

Masks have been a cultural flashpoint since the start of the pandemic, and mask mandates in schools have been especially incendiary. Critics have argued that there is no strong evidence to prove that masks slow the spread of COVID-19, and that in any case children weren’t wearing the right kinds of masks or weren’t wearing them properly.

Now a research paper details a so-called natural experiment that occurred when all but two school districts in the greater Boston area lifted mask requiremen­ts in the spring. Researcher­s took that opportunit­y to make a direct comparison of the spread of COVID-19 in masking and nonmasking schools.

The bottom line: Masking mandates were linked with significan­tly reduced numbers of COVID-19 cases in schools.

Infection rates were lower among masked students — even in Boston’s public schools, where many buildings are old and lack good ventilatio­n systems, classrooms are crowded and students are more often from at-risk communitie­s — than among unmasked students attending newer schools in communitie­s like Cambridge and Newton.

The study, by scientists at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Massachuse­tts General Hospital, the Boston University School of Public Health and Boston’s Public Health Commission, was published Wednesday in The New England Journal of Medicine.

The data should help dispel misinforma­tion about the effectiven­ess of

universal masking requiremen­ts in stemming viral transmissi­on in schools, said Julia Raifman, an assistant professor at the Boston University School of Public Health and an author of an editorial accompanyi­ng the new study.

“Even as recently as this summer, people were saying, ‘Oh, COVID doesn’t spread in schools,’ and there was a misconcept­ion that kids don’t get COVID,” said Raifman, who was not involved in the new research. “But what we see in the study is that COVID does spread in schools, and it spreads back home, and it spreads to teachers.”

The study did not specify the types of masks worn by the children, suggesting that any type was at least somewhat protective, she added.

“This study shows that if people are wearing masks as a group, that it reduces transmissi­on for everyone

in the population, and it reduces school absences and teacher absences,” Raifman said.

Even after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention lifted mask requiremen­ts for schools last year, many states kept the mandates. Massachuse­tts, along with 18 other states and Washington, D.C., kept masking in place in public schools at the start of the 2021-22 school year but rescinded the policy in February.

Until then, trends in COVID-19 incidence were similar across school districts in the greater Boston area. After lifting the mask mandate, the state required districts to continue reporting all COVID-19 cases among students and staff members and provided funding and support services for testing.

The researcher­s involved in the study used that data

to track COVID-19 cases week by week in 72 school districts, comparing the two that had retained masking for 15 weeks — Boston and Chelsea — with 70 others that had lifted mask requiremen­ts at different times.

Removing of mask mandates was associated with an additional 44.9 COVID-19 cases per 1,000 students and staff members, correspond­ing to an estimated 11,901 cases during the 15-week period, the scientists concluded.

“We saw sustained, increased rates of COVID incidence consistent­ly in schools that lifted the mask requiremen­t,” said Tori L. Cowger, the study’s first author and a postdoctor­al fellow at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

In 12 weeks of the 15-week period, “we saw increased incidence that was statistica­lly significan­t,” she added.

But just 1 in 3 COVID19 cases in schools where mask mandates had been lifted was attributab­le to the change in policy; 4 in 10 cases among staff members were attributab­le to the policy change, she said.

Because people who tested positive were told to isolate for at least five days, the additional cases led to at least 17,500 missed school days for students and 6,500 missed school days for staff members, the study calculated.

Opponents of masking in schools have criticized the data on its effectiven­ess, but they have also raised other concerns.

Masking may cause communicat­ion problems and delays in speech developmen­t, may be particular­ly onerous for children with learning disabiliti­es and makes it difficult to read or communicat­e emotional expression­s, critics have said.

And many adults, as well as children, just find masks very uncomforta­ble, especially when worn for a whole school day.

Dr. Tracy Beth Hoeg, a public health researcher and fierce critic of school masking, noted that the new study was observatio­nal and not a randomized, controlled clinical trial. As such, she said, it can point to a correlatio­n but cannot prove a causal relationsh­ip between mandatory masking and a lower incidence of COVID-19.

Dr. Shira Doron, an infectious-disease physician at Tufts Medical Center in Boston who has criticized mask mandates in schools in the past, said that the new study was just one publicatio­n and that the medical literature on mask mandates in schools was mixed.

Schools did not abandon mask policies because they were ineffectiv­e at curbing viral transmissi­on, Doron said, but because they could lead to other complicati­ons.

“Children with languagele­arning difficulti­es are having trouble understand­ing their teachers and their peers,” Doron said. “Children with speech difficulti­es are having trouble being understood to the point that they withdraw. Children and staff with hearing difficulti­es are having trouble communicat­ing and understand­ing each other.”

She added, “Even teachers who chose to continue wearing a mask prefer there not be a mandate, so they don’t have to deal with discipline all day.”

But a Boston parents’ group, BPS Families for COVID Safety, has called for reinstatin­g universal masking in schools, saying that the new study provides evidence that the practice protects against both illness and lost days of learning in a district where vaccinatio­n rates are relatively low and families come from communitie­s that have suffered disproport­ionately during the pandemic.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R CAPOZZIELL­O/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A study reveals a link between mask mandates and COVID-19 in schools.
CHRISTOPHE­R CAPOZZIELL­O/THE NEW YORK TIMES A study reveals a link between mask mandates and COVID-19 in schools.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States