- Sales of face masks are spiking in China and around the world amid a coronavirus outbreak.
- For the average person, wearing a mask is not as effective as everyday measures like hand-washing and avoiding close contact with anyone who might be infected.
- The CDC recommends that healthcare providers and those who might be infected wear masks, however.
Of the many preventative measures you can take to protect yourself from the new coronavirus, wearing a face mask is one of the most visible. But health experts don’t think it’ll help much.
„There’s little harm in it,“ Eric Toner, a scientist at Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, told Business Insider. „But it’s not likely to be very effective in preventing it.“
Since the coronavirus outbreak started Wuhan, China, on December 31, more than 288,044 people have been infected and at least 11,949 have died. Cases have been recorded in 186 other countries including the US and Canada.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the best precautions are the standard, everyday ways to avoid all germs: wash your hands frequently, try not to touch your face, and avoid close contact with sick people.
The CDC has, however, directed healthcare providers to give surgical masks to any patients that present flu-like symptoms or have recently traveled to Wuhan. That lowers the risk that a potentially infected person could spread the coronavirus to others via saliva or phlegm.
The agency also directed doctors and nurses treating potentially infected patients to wear masks and goggles.
But for the average person, a mask is probably not necessary.
Two types of face masks
Face masks are designed to catch large contaminants and particles. There are two common kinds: surgical masks and N95 respirators.
N95 respirators filter out most airborne particles from the surrounding air, preventing wearers from breathing in particles down to 0.3 microns in diameter. These types of masks are often used when air quality is poor due to wildfire smoke or pollution, and they’re designed to fit tightly against one’s face.
However, the coronavirus measures between .05 and 0.2 microns in diameter, according to a recent article in The Lancet.
Surgical masks, meanwhile, are designed to keep droplets and splatter from passing from a person’s mouth to nearby surfaces or people. So they’re primarily meant to keep healthcare providers from spreading their own mouth-borne germs to patients.
Many people do not wear either type of face mask properly – wearers often move the masks to the side to touch their faces throughout the day, breaking the barrier that the mask is supposed to create. This makes the protection ineffective.
Still, sales of face masks are spiking
In Wuhan, China, authorities there have urged all citizens to wear masks in public places, since the virus seems to have an incubation period of up to two weeks. So people could be sick and spreading germs before they show any symptoms. The city is currently under quarantine.
Many stores in China have reportedly sold out of masks. Cao Jun, general manager for mask manufacturer Lanhine in China, told Reuters on January 23 that demand had already reached 200 million masks per day at that time. Lanhine’s normal production rate is 400,000 per day.
3M, which produces goods like Scotch tape and Post-Its, announced on January 28 that it would boost production of face masks.
South Korean Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki warned that the government would take action against those who gouge mask prices.
via Why Face Masks Probably Won’t Protect You From Coronavirus