To be effective, masks need to be worn correctly. (Jacek Poblocki, Unsplash) |
How did this get started — again? "A British outfit known as the Cochrane Library put out a new report on masking. When the Cochrane Review, which is highly respected in medical circles, tackled the mask question, it found that "wearing a mask may make little to no difference in how many people caught a flu‐like illness/Covid‐like illness," Freyer writes. "But the review encompassed primarily studies conducted before the pandemic, which examined the spread of influenza. The flu is far less contagious than Covid-19, which could lead to underestimating the effects of masks. The review also mixed studies of health-care workers with those involving the general public, and included studies that couldn’t answer the question of whether people actually wore their masks correctly."
Who's causing the fuss? "Twitter erupted with criticisms. Then one of the Cochrane Review authors was quoted in a Substack newsletter article
saying of masks, "There is just no evidence that they make any
difference. Full stop." . . . The Substack interview prompted New York
Times columnist Bret Stephens to scold
all those who favored mask mandates, saying they owed the world an
apology. That unleashed another round of social media outrage. . . . But as others have pointed out, there’s no evidence
that masks don’t make a difference. The big problem is that there isn’t
enough evidence, period."
Wait a minute; what do masks prevent?
“We have good evidence from laboratory studies [that] if you’re wearing
a mask correctly and you’re in the presence of the virus, the mask will
protect you,” Jennifer Nuzzo, professor of epidemiology at Brown University School of Public Health,
told Freyer. Commenting on the Cochrane Review, Freyer added, “The
appropriate conclusion is, we don’t have great evidence showing that
masks change infection rates in populations. But we don’t know why that
is. It’s probably not to do with masks themselves, but how they’re
worn.”
What did Dr. Anthony Fauci, former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, say about the Cochrane study?
“It’s a meta-analysis of a very large number of studies, many of which
had nothing to do with Covid, and many of which did studies with masks
that were not regularly worn every day and properly,” Fauci told Freyer.
“There were only two studies in that entire meta-analysis that were
exclusively looking at masks with Covid.”
Could I get a straight answer?
"The basic advice hasn’t changed. Wear a mask in situations where you
think you’re at risk of infection, such as a crowded indoor setting,
especially during a time when Covid transmission is high," Freyer
reports. "The level of that risk is determined by the level of
transmission in your community, your own vulnerability to severe
illness, the vulnerability of people you expect to come in contact with,
and your personal tolerance for risk."
Final thoughts? Fauci told Freyer, “Everyone is different. Everyone’s risk for a complication is different. So there’s no set rule.”
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