Science Why Masks Still Matter - Masks work against not only COVID-19 but also the flu, RSV, and other respiratory viruses. We should still be using them

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During the COVID-19 pandemic, masks were weaponized for partisan purposes. “The politicization of mask use,” says William Hanage, infectious disease epidemiologist at Harvard University, “makes as much sense as politicizing gravity.” Masks are simply a tool—a protective barrier—that can help to reduce the spread of respiratory infections, just as condoms are a barrier that can reduce the spread of sexually transmitted infections. And as we head into winter, with rising rates of multiple respiratory viruses, including flu, RSV, and new coronavirus variants, masks could help all Americans to avoid getting sick.

Mask use is on the decline in the United States. Recent public polling shows that nearly two thirds of Americans never or rarely wear a mask outside their homes, a sharp rise from just a quarter during the height of the Omicron wave in January 2022. There are many reasons for the decline in masking. These include pandemic fatigue, a justified perception that the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic is behind us (there has been a sustained decline in daily COVID-19 deaths), widespread COVID-19 vaccination (80% of Americans have now had at least one vaccine dose), reduced federal and state efforts to provide free high quality masks to the public, and the removal of mask mandates.

Despite these trends, it is important for the public to know that community masking can help prevent the spread of a range of respiratory infections. The Centers for Disease Control notes that flu hospitalization rates are higher than usual for the time of year, an additional impetus to promote mask use. A useful analogy is to think of masks like umbrellas, says Simon Nicholas Williams, a Lecturer in Psychology at the University of Swansea in Wales. When it’s raining or the forecast is for rain, we take an umbrella out with us. “But just as there’s no need to carry an umbrella with us when it’s sunny,” he says, “we needn’t be expected to wear masks all the time.”

Respiratory disease transmission can be divided broadly into spread by droplets, which are larger than 5 microns and fall quickly to the ground, and aerosols, which are smaller than 5 microns and can float in the air for hours as well as be inhaled. The science of such transmission suggests that all viruses and bacteria that travel by these routes should similarly be stopped by mitigation measures that broadly target these routes—including high quality masks such as N95 or KN95s that block both droplets and aerosols.

The data on the efficacy of masks to prevent respiratory infections dates back to well before COVID-19. During the SARS outbreak in 2003, studies showed that the use of face masks probably reduced transmission. A study on SARS transmission from five Hong Kong hospitals, for example, in which staff were exposed to infected patients found that staff who reported mask use were less likely to be infected. Even during SARS, though, there were signs that upgrading masks could be important. An outbreak from a Hong Kong hospital in which unidentified cases transmitted to healthcare workers who were only wearing surgical masks flagged the relevance of high quality masks such as N95s.

Data on tuberculosis transmission in healthcare settings is also informative. Irregular use of N95 respirators among Brazilian healthcare workers was associated with a higher risk of latent tuberculosis (whereby someone is harboring the bacteria, but it is in a dormant state with a risk of becoming active later on). Furthermore, other airborne pathogens, such as a bacterium called Coxiella burnetti, which passes from animals to humans and causes the illness Q fever, have caused outbreaks that were stopped directly with the use of N95s. During the COVID-19 pandemic, use of N95 masks had the added benefit of reducing transmission of other airborne pathogens, including tuberculosis.

The type of mask that is sufficient depends on the pathogen in question and whether it transmits more effectively by the airborne route, or by larger respiratory droplets. For instance, studies looking into RSV found that while detectable in aerosols, this route was unlikely to be efficient, meaning N95-caliber masks aren’t required. However, given we are now faced with a concurrent increase in multiple respiratory viruses at once—including flu, RSV, and COVID-19—masks that block both routes are preferable.

Currently, the CDC does not list masks under their guidance to Americans for how to prevent flu. And data has been mixed in the past with regard to what type of mask would truly be needed. A randomized trial examining whether use of N95 respirators versus medical masks in preventing influenza among healthcare workers found no significant difference. However, the study was primarily conducted in outpatient clinic settings, which are notably different than within a hospital, or within a crowded public setting for longer periods of time. In another randomized trial, use of N95 masks was associated with significantly lower rates of respiratory illness, and lower rates of bacterial colonization of the respiratory tract. Furthermore, COVID-19 mitigation efforts of the past two seasons very likely contributed to exceptionally low flu transmission, as noted by the CDC. Given that flu is less transmissible than COVID-19, the level of community masking needed to blunt transmission would likely be lower and more easily achievable. With limited yet mixed data, we would be wise to heed caution and err on the side of masking in high risk, indoor crowded public settings where these diseases spread most easily.

What the COVID-19 pandemic has made clear is that we need more robust data to understand many aspects of public masking, including how effective masks will be in preventing other respiratory viruses. While the efficacy of masking differs by what type of mask and material is used, as well as mask fit, it is also affected by when and where masks are used, and how consistently. In healthcare settings, we as physicians consistently use N95 respirators in rooms of patients with airborne diseases because we know they reduce inhalation of infectious aerosols, which reduces the chance that we get sick. This basic principle holds true whether in a hospital room, or in a crowded bus or grocery store.

Getting vaccinated against flu and COVID-19 is the most important step you can take to prevent severe illness from these conditions. Unfortunately, there is no licensed RSV vaccine, though there is a candidate vaccine for infants that is showing promising results. Even with the vaccines that we do have, while we will continue to be affected by respiratory viruses every year, the COVID-19 pandemic should remind us that we have a means to reduce spread through using high quality masks. Masks will likely help reduce the spread of multiple viruses and some bacteria—and while more data must be generated to understand how best to improve our community level efforts, we have enough already to tell us to mask up this season.

https://time.com/6232830/why-masks-still-matter-covid-19/ (Archive)
 
And in the USA three times as many people died of cancer and heart disease.
Can you imagine if there was the same kind of panic over heart disease as over the coof?

Like fast food restaurants shutting down, or the production of all milk-based dairy ending?
 
It's such a shame East Asia and especially Japan [...] probably won't ever go back to being normal.
The coof scare may have mentally messed them up even more than it did Western SJWs.

(That low birthrate problem in Japan may not be exactly helped with people there being even more mentally anonymized now.)
 
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While the faggotry is still apparent, it does give me an excuse to turn gas masks into fashion. And immediately tell everyone to get on my level.

Still, I find it galling that people think that paper cloth would be enough for LE DEADLIEST VIRUS THROUGHOUT HISTORY.

Masking is a religion for these people. Its one of the clearest signs on who is under the thrall of the Cathedral.
 
If you're going to wear a mask, make sure you wear it all day until it's filthy, or better yet get a cloth one and never wash it. Make sure to touch it constantly and leave it on the table or stuff it into your pocket for later when you don't feel like wearing it for any reason. Don't forget to twist the ear loops around so that the edges don't seal up against your face in case you accidentally position it so that it covers your nose and mouth at the same time.

It is literally a religious garment at this moment in time. If I see someone wearing one I assume they're dangerously mentally ill.
 
Data on tuberculosis transmission in healthcare settings is also informative. Irregular use of N95 respirators among Brazilian healthcare workers was associated with a higher risk of latent tuberculosis (whereby someone is harboring the bacteria, but it is in a dormant state with a risk of becoming active later on). Furthermore, other airborne pathogens, such as a bacterium called Coxiella burnetti, which passes from animals to humans and causes the illness Q fever, have caused outbreaks that were stopped directly with the use of N95s. During the COVID-19 pandemic, use of N95 masks had the added benefit of reducing transmission of other airborne pathogens, including tuberculosis.

Just how often does someone in the 1st world get Q fever? I know tuberculosis is on the rise, but that's due pretty much entirely to 3rd world illegal immigrants and the homeless choosing to live in filth and do drugs. Neither group is likely to regularly wear masks. If you're really worried, removing illegals and homeless addicts would be far more effective than wearing masks.

Mask use is on the decline in the United States. Recent public polling shows that nearly two thirds of Americans never or rarely wear a mask outside their homes, a sharp rise from just a quarter during the height of the Omicron wave in January 2022. There are many reasons for the decline in masking. These include pandemic fatigue, a justified perception that the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic is behind us (there has been a sustained decline in daily COVID-19 deaths), widespread COVID-19 vaccination (80% of Americans have now had at least one vaccine dose), reduced federal and state efforts to provide free high quality masks to the public, and the removal of mask mandates.

OK? So regular mask use is way way down, but deaths are much lower, and most people have given in and gotten vaccinated? You're outright admitting that people's perception that the worst of covid is behind us is justified and give a bunch of reasons why.

Despite these trends, it is important for the public to know that community masking can help prevent the spread of a range of respiratory infections.

Who doesn't know this after two years worth of PSAs?

Anyway, this is a Time magazine special. Dumb midwit writing with no style or insight, written by someone who I'm sure graduated from the right J school, but has nothing original or interesting or informative to say. I honestly think Time is being sustained by glowie money, no one has paid them any attention in years, and I have trouble believing they have enough paid subscribers to stay open. There can't be that many Doctors' offices in America, surely.
 
It's such a shame East Asia and especially Japan have gone full retard with masks and probably won't ever go back to being normal.
It seems to be really odd - a lot of people aren't wearing them at certain times and then at others, they are.
Same with Korea. Cannot work them out.
Relatives who live in those countries are.... strange about things, like they don't care about Covid, they just care what others think, but also not. It's weird.
Mind you, they could never understand why I wore sunglasses all the time outside. Maybe it's "logic" to them now.
 
Wear the mask, slave. We just need your compliance.


It's just like my favourite consumer product!!
 
This article lies about vaccines, masks, and abuses the conclusions of the studies it links.

Forced masking has done incalculable damage to society and anyone advocating for a return to it should be placed in the corner and furnished a lovely dunce cap to wear.
 
It's such a shame East Asia and especially Japan have gone full retard with masks and probably won't ever go back to being normal.
Can confirm, I flew Japan Airways back from SEA and they were full on mask Nazis. Fortunately it doesn't take much pushback to get them off your case.

The airport was a ghost town, the terminal was almost completely closed due to their covid policy to the point where I couldn't even get a few dollars in the local cash to buy a pop from the vending machines.

I was one of the only people not in a mask, lol.
 
This shit is why people can't go out in public without getting sick now and why RSV has been so bad these past couple of years
 
I've got to say, it's weird to go from articles in the 90s, complaining about how kids immune systems were being weakened by lack of exposure to playmates and dirt, to probably the same writers now complaining that kids are too exposed to the nasty, dirty outdoors and other people.
 
When I was in Korea many people wore masks in the winter. But as has been seen, those masks were worthless when the Chinese Flu hit. Only mask I know of that is truly effective is a military gas mask with a biological filter.
Asians don't wear masks to stop contagions. They use it to not spray others when they sneeze of cough, out of politeness. I take the bus often, and there are so many people who do either or both without having the simple courtesy of covering their mouths. On the contrary, they cough with their mouths fully open.
 
Why should I care if the fat and the elderly die? Do you guys have any idea how close Social Security is to collapsing?

I understand the liberal urge to protect life. I really do, I know that you all want to be heroes and to stop the bad man. I want you to consider who the bad man really is, because I'm offering a way out of this mess.

Start coughing in people's faces. Focus on elderly white people and young blacks. Get them as sick as you possibly can because every retiree or welfare queen that dies gives Uncle Sam a little bit more breathing room.
 
I don't care if the masks work or they don't.
I don't care if the jabby wabbys work or they don't.

I am simply not scared of Covid or any other extremely common respiratory infection.
If you are, that is not my problem.
If you try to make it my problem, I will get mad at you.
If you try to ruin my life over it, I will hate you for the rest of my life and will forever lose trust in you and your opinions.
 
Wear a mask in a room I drop a nasty fart in and tell me you can't smell it. Those actual shit particles are bigger than a virus.

Case closed.
IIRC, the particles interpreted as smells are much smaller than viruses.

N/R/P masks aren't for vapors/smells, anyhow. That's when you use OV filters.
 
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