fbpx

Can fabric masks stem the coronavirus’ spread?

‏By Erin Garcia de Jesus

People across the United States are donning homemade masks in an effort to curb transmission of the coronavirus. But there isn’t enough data to know for sure whether such cloth masks will prevent an infected person from spreading the virus to someone else, experts say.

In the face of evidence that
the coronavirus may spread by talking and breathing,
on top of coughing or sneezing, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended April 3 that people cover their faces with cloth or fabric when going out in public.

Cloth may cut down on some
large respiratory droplets from a cough or sneeze, but it’s unclear whether it
will also catch smaller droplets called aerosols that are released by just
breathing or talking.

Cloth masks, as well as surgical masks, are designed to protect others from virus spread by the mask wearer, not the other way around. Those infected with the virus that causes COVID-19 can transmit it

to others before they begin showing symptoms. When the masks are worn as a general habit, they aim to prevent

people who are unaware that they are sick from unwittingly transmitting the virus to others. Wearing a mask is not meant to be a replacement for social distancing, handwashing and other efforts.

But there are few studies evaluating the effectiveness of fabric masks at preventing respiratory diseases from spreading, researchers from the U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine wrote in an April 8 letter to the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.

READ MORE  UHN features Apple Watch in a new study to advance remote management of heart failure

Those that do exist suggest
that fabric masks may capture large respiratory droplets, like those from a
cough or a sneeze. Those made of different types of cloth have a wide-ranging ability to filter virus-sized particles, with a trade-off between filtration and ability to breathe.

In one study, a mask that used 16 layers of handkerchief fabric was able to filter out 63 percent of 300-nanometer-sized
particles. (The coronavirus is between 50 to 200 nanometers in diameter.) But
that mask was harder to breathe with compared with thick, tight-fitting N95
respirators, often used in hospitals, that can block minuscule particles. Wearing
a cloth mask with that many layers would be uncomfortable and may “cause some
to pass out,” the researchers wrote in the letter.

Surgical masks are somewhat less
mysterious. Those masks may help reduce
transmission of influenza and seasonal coronaviruses
that cause
common colds from people with symptoms, researchers report April 3 in Nature Medicine. Researchers quantified
the amount of virus exhaled by participants both with and without a surgical
mask over 30 minutes.

Those masks significantly reduced the amount of detectable influenza virusinfluenza virus in respiratory droplet particles, as well as the amount of seasonal coronaviruses in aerosols.

Regardless of how well they work, the success of cloth or surgical masks at protecting others depends on whether people wear the gear properly including keeping it in place and making sure it doesn’t get too wet. Moisture, such as from breathing, can trap virus in a mask and make it a strong source of contamination when the wearer takes it off.

READ MORE  The association between long-term exposure to low-level PM2.5 and mortality in the state of Queensland, Australia: A modelling study with the difference-in-differences approach

Though the evidence for fabric masks is sparse, health officials should still encourage people to wear face masks, other researchers write in an April 9 analysis in the BMJ. Limited protection could still save lives. “As with parachutes for jumping out of aeroplanes, it is time to act” without waiting for evidence, the authors say.

Source

Ominy science editory team

A team of dedicated users that search, fetch and publish research stories for Ominy science.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Enable notifications of new posts OK No thanks