USA TODAY US Edition

Doctors say valves in face masks aren’t very effective

- Amanda Morris

PHOENIX – Masks mandates are in place in cities across the country, and those orders are increasing­ly banning the use of masks that have valves.

Though these one-way valves are designed to help provide more comfort by allowing air to escape the mask when users exhale, that function also allows the virus to spread.

“It defeats the purpose,” said Kai Singbartl, a medical doctor who is the chair for infection prevention and control at the Mayo Clinic in Arizona. “They are unfiltered, those valves are the path of least resistance so to speak, it’s easier to exhale and get rid of the heat and moisture.”

But, in addition to exhaling heat and moisture, Singbartl said, wearers are exhaling viral droplets and particles.

A spokespers­on for Arizona’s Maricopa County, which has specified in its mask mandate that valve masks do not comply with the county’s masking requiremen­ts, wrote that the county’s ban was based on a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommenda­tion against the use of valve masks in health care settings.

But other county mask mandates do not have specific restrictio­ns against valve masks, and those that do have bans against valve masks don’t always seem to be enforcing them.

The Mayo Clinic isn’t allowing patients inside if they are wearing valve masks, but Singbartl said he has seen people wearing them before they are asked to put on a different type of mask. He said he has even seen health care profession­als who don’t work at the Mayo Clinic using such masks.

“In a sterile field they’re absolutely banned because it allows unfiltered, exhaled air in,” said Kristine Romin, a doctor at Camelback Dermatolog­y & Skin Surgery, where patients who are wearing valve masks are not allowed in.

A Maricopa County spokespers­on wrote in an email that Maricopa County Public Health is “not an enforcemen­t agency” and said that if there are unresolved issues between individual­s or businesses, they are encouraged to contact their local law enforcemen­t nonemergen­cy number.

Additional­ly, they recommende­d further education about the masks.

Romin also has seen some people wearing valve masks in public and believes people who are wearing the masks may not even realize that they may be further spreading the virus.

“When you look at it, you think, wow this should be really protective,” she said. “But it does not decrease the transmissi­on of COVID-19, and you’re supposed to protect both the wearer and the person 6 feet away.”

Mask policies continue to evolve and shift as researcher­s learn more about the virus, but for now, Singbartl recommends using masks that cover both the nose and the mouth with some sort of material such as cotton cloth and to ensure that masks fit snugly on the face to prevent virus particles from escaping or entering.

 ?? AMANDA MORRIS/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? A mask with breathing valves.
AMANDA MORRIS/USA TODAY NETWORK A mask with breathing valves.

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