Now that the COVID-19 pandemic is declared over, more people have started to ditch face masks to enjoy a more carefree experience when breathing and talking in public settings. But experts warn that we shouldn’t stop wearing masks in healthcare settings.
A study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine on Monday examined patient safety in healthcare settings, particularly how masking as a mitigation strategy should remain relevant even after the pandemic.
“Masking in the community has been a controversial mitigation strategy during the pandemic, in part because of the dearth of high-quality evidence documenting efficacy and in part because mask-wearing has become politicized,” study authors Tara Palmore of George Washington University School of Medicine and David Henderson of the National Institutes of Health wrote.
“Most published studies addressing mask efficacy have methodological flaws and adherence to mask-wearing has been suboptimal in virtually all. Demonstrating that masks work is difficult when they are not worn consistently. Although gold-standard evidence is not available, we argue that despite the lack of clinical efficacy trials …, masking in interactions between patients and health care personnel should continue to receive serious consideration as a patient safety measure,” they added.
The authors reviewed the latest science on the protective quality of face masks and found that there was not a significant difference in the protection afforded by surgical masks and N95 respirators in healthcare settings. They reviewed three randomized trials and 21 observational studies to get a clear picture of how effective N95, surgical and cloth masks are in reducing COVID transmission.
Evidence on surgical vs. cloth masks was “insufficient” due to the limitations in the research they evaluated. However, they maintained that surgical masks and N95 respirators are good at regulating the spread of aerosols and droplets based on lab studies. The authors admitted…
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