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)
 
Man if only you people defended contraception before abortion as much as masks I'd take your dumbfuck reasoning seriously.

But I'm not spending a pittance just to make you dumb faggots feel safer.
 
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.
You know what'd help stop new corona strains; shutting down that fucking lab in Boston that's apparently working on an end of the world strain. Fucking get rid of the big threats before you start telling me how to behave.
 
These fuckwagons can eat shit.

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.

Only place I wear a mask is at medical facilities, and my mask says "This mask is USELESS".
 
And people shouldnt be shamed for wearing one either.

Depends.

1. Are they trying to talk to me with a fucking air filter on? Fuck off. I can't understand what the fuck you are saying. I don't want to answer your stupid question anyway, which 9/10 times is "Is this gluten free?" If you're going to wear a mask, at least have the courtesy to shut the fuck up.
2. Are you wearing the mask to walk to your restaurant table, then you're going to take it off and chew with your mouth open and laugh at everything like a donkey? You should be ashamed at your dinner etiquette without even the mask in play. Shaming is more than you deserve, you are incapable of shame.
3. My Little Pony mask or Pokemans or whatever.
 
Common illnesses are spreading more this year because staying indoors for two years fucked the usefulness of people's memory T cells. Normally they get updated as people encounter viruses and bacteria going about their lives. Lots of stupid people hid for 2 years and now their immune system is running on way out of date information. So infections they wouldn't have even noticed from being exposed previously to very similar strains are causing illness now. The strains today aren't as similar to the last ones they were exposed to 2+ years ago. Good job I fucking love sciencers
 
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I mean how else are you supposed to take stuff from the grocery store without getting caught? The last two years have been great for kleptomaniacs.
 
I don't even accept this premise. Remember how they actually expected us to believe influenza vanished throughout all of 2020?

I just assume every health statistic is a politically-motivated lie at this point.
[powerleveling would go here]

I can say with confidence that there has definitely been an uptick in RSV, especially among children, and respiratory illnesses that aren't coof in general. Visits to doctor's offices and ERs for general flu-like shit is up, more than in a "normal" fall-winter, and it isn't coof causing them

It's not a situation that justifies any speshul policy though, in the grand scheme of things a few more people are getting a little sicker than normally. Their immune systems are being given the opportunity to catch up now, which is a good thing, and it definitely doesn't justify mask wearing and other faggotry
 
If masks are so effective then why did, in your terms, COVID cause a devastating amount of deaths? So much so, that we had to shut down the entire world and ruined a countless amount of lives?
 
If masks are so effective then why did, in your terms, COVID cause a devastating amount of deaths? So much so, that we had to shut down the entire world and ruined a countless amount of lives?
"But it would have been even worse!"

The conveniently unfalsifiable justification for all leftist policy.
 
I still see see the occasional head of maskcattle wearing a mask when driving alone in their car.

The other day I went to get takeout and some boomer walked in wearing his face diaper. No one was wearing masks. He looked at us with a look of fear/hate in his eyes, walked to the sanitizer dispenser, spritzed out a pint of sanitizer ans tarted furiously scrubbing his hands and forearms. He then went to the opposite side of the room and crossed his arms whiles silently seething at everyone staring daggers.

Some of these people are permanently broken like an NPC with a buggy script. They will forever be stuck in their 2 weeks to flatten the curve mental prison. Forever being however long it takes for their 5th booster to kick in and finally collapse their immune system.

I'd feel bad but remembering how quickly these cattle went full Genrikh Yagoda, i am left entirely unmoved by their suffering
 
[powerleveling would go here]

I can say with confidence that there has definitely been an uptick in RSV, especially among children, and respiratory illnesses that aren't coof in general. Visits to doctor's offices and ERs for general flu-like shit is up, more than in a "normal" fall-winter, and it isn't coof causing them

It's not a situation that justifies any speshul policy though, in the grand scheme of things a few more people are getting a little sicker than normally. Their immune systems are being given the opportunity to catch up now, which is a good thing, and it definitely doesn't justify mask wearing and other faggotry
And the symptoms of RSV is becoming more covid-like. Lotta weirdass tingling sensation and fizzing by people with RSV.
Oddly enough covid tests ARE showing up all negative though. So either the tests are shit or some other fuckery.
 
And can a clown journo not post a BS hot take for once?
Can a bear not shit in the woods?


[powerleveling would go here]

I can say with confidence that there has definitely been an uptick in RSV, especially among children, and respiratory illnesses that aren't coof in general. Visits to doctor's offices and ERs for general flu-like shit is up, more than in a "normal" fall-winter, and it isn't coof causing them

It's not a situation that justifies any speshul policy though, in the grand scheme of things a few more people are getting a little sicker than normally. Their immune systems are being given the opportunity to catch up now, which is a good thing, and it definitely doesn't justify mask wearing and other faggotry
I wonder if the experimental medical technology they injected might have ass-fucked their immune system in any way.
 
If masks are so effective then why did, in your terms, COVID cause a devastating amount of deaths? So much so, that we had to shut down the entire world and ruined a countless amount of lives?
And in the USA three times as many people died of cancer and heart disease. But we didn't damage our society, our economy and our country trying to stop the spread of those diseases. Apples and oranges? No. Have had cancer and open-heart. Scary shit both times. Had the coof recently. No big deal.
 
The strongest mask enforcing cities did and do almost zero about public spitting or outdoor bathroom habits.
They know nothing about hygiene or public safety.
It was never about hygiene or public safety, it was about demoralizing people, or at least, a social experiment.
 
It was never about hygiene or public safety, it was about demoralizing people, or at least, a social experiment.
This. Also testing compliance and slow-rolling the next phase of social control. The cattle contingent making up a huge percentage showed them that they can basically get away with anything.

The demoralization and humiliation ritual aspect is also hard to ignore.

Apropos: some britfag named Dalrymple said it concisely.

In my studies of communist societies, I came to the conclusion that the purpose of communist propaganda was not to persuade or convince, not to inform but to humiliate; and therefore, the less it corresponded to reality the better. When people are forced to remain silent when they are being told the most obvious lies, or even worse when they are forced to repeat lies themselves, they lose once and for all their sense of probity. To assent to obvious lies is ...in some small way to become evil oneself. One's standing to resist anything is thus eroded, and even destroyed. A variety of emasculated liars is easy to control. I think if you examine political correctness, it has the same effect and is intended to.
 
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