The problem is that many journalists are spreading bogus
claims and confusing the people.
“The debate over masks’ effectiveness in fighting the spread
of the coronavirus intensified recently when a respected scientific nonprofit
said its review of studies assessing measures to impede the spread of viral
illnesses found it was “uncertain whether wearing masks or N95/P2 respirators
helps to slow the spread of respiratory viruses.”
Now the organization, Cochrane, says the way it summarized
the review was unclear and imprecise, and that the way some people interpreted
it was wrong.
“Many commentators have claimed that a recently updated
Cochrane Review shows that ‘masks don’t work’, which is an inaccurate and
misleading interpretation,” Karla Soares-Weiser, the editor in chief of The
Cochrane Library, said in a statement.
“The review examined whether interventions to promote mask
wearing help to slow the spread of respiratory viruses,” Soares-Weiser said,
adding, “given the limitations in the primary evidence, the review is not able
to address the question of whether mask wearing itself reduces people’s risk of
contracting or spreading respiratory viruses.”
She said that “this wording was open to misinterpretation,
for which we apologize,” and that Cochrane would revise the summary.
Soares-Weiser also said, though, that one of the lead
authors of the review even more seriously misinterpreted its finding on masks
by saying in an interview that it proved “there is just no evidence that they
make any difference.” In fact, Soares-Weiser said, “that statement is not an
accurate representation of what the review found.”
Cochrane reviews are often referred to as gold standard
evidence in medicine because they aggregate results from many randomized trials
to reach an overall conclusion — a great method for evaluating drugs, for
example, which often are subjected to rigorous but small trials. Combining
their results can lead to more confident conclusions.
Masks and mask mandates have been a hot controversy during
the pandemic. The flawed summary — and further misinterpretation of it — set
off a debate between those who said the study showed there was no basis for
relying on masks or mask mandates and those who said it did nothing to diminish
the need for them.
Michael D. Brown, a doctor and academic who serves on the
Cochrane editorial board and made the final decision on the review, told me the
review couldn’t arrive at a firm conclusion because there weren’t enough
high-quality randomized trials with high rates of mask adherence.
While the review assessed 78 studies, only 10 of those
focused on what happens when people wear masks versus when they don’t, and a
further five looked at how effective different types of masks were at blocking
transmission, usually for health care workers. The remainder involved other
measures aimed at lowering transmission, like hand washing or disinfection,
while a few studies also considered masks in combination with other measures.
Of those 10 studies that looked at masking, the two done since the start of the
Covid pandemic both found that masks helped.
The calculations the review used to reach a conclusion were
dominated by prepandemic studies that were not very informative about how well
masks blocked the transmission of respiratory viruses.
For example, in one study of hajj pilgrims in Mecca, only
24.7 percent of those assigned to wear masks reported using one daily, but not
all the time (while 14.3 percent in the no-mask group wore one anyway). The
pilgrims then slept together, generally in tents with 50 or 100 people. Not
surprisingly, given there was little difference between the two groups,
researchers found no difference from mask wearing and declared their results
“inconclusive.”
In another prepandemic study, college students were asked to
wear masks for at least six hours a day while in their dormitories, but they
were not obligated to wear them elsewhere. Researchers found no difference in
infection rates between those who wore masks and those who did not. The authors
noted this might be because “the amount of time masks were worn was not
sufficient” — obviously, college students also go to classes and socialize
where they may not wear masks.
Yet despite their inconclusiveness, the data from just these
two studies accounted for roughly half of the calculations for evaluating the
impact of mask wearing on transmission. The other six prepandemic studies
similarly suffered from low masking adherence, limited time wearing them and,
often, small sample sizes.
The only prepandemic study reviewed by Cochrane reporting
high rates of mask adherence started during the worrying H1N1 season in 2009 in
Germany, and found mask wearing reduced spread if started quickly after
diagnosis and if a mask was worn consistently (though its sample size, too, was
small).
So what we learn from the Cochrane review is that,
especially before the pandemic, distributing masks didn’t lead people to wear
them, which is why their effect on transmission couldn’t be confidently
evaluated.
Soares-Weiser told me the review should be seen as a call
for more data, and said she worried that misinterpretations of it could
undermine preparedness for future outbreaks.
So let’s look more broadly at what we know about masks.
Crucially, the question of whether a mask reduces a wearer’s
risk of infection is not the same as whether wearing masks slows the spread of
respiratory viruses in a community.
To use randomized trials to study whether masks reduce a
virus’s spread by keeping infected people from transmitting a pathogen, we need
randomized comparisons of large groups, like having people in one city assigned
to wear masks and not to in another. As ethically and logistically difficult as
that might seem, there was one study during the pandemic in which masks were
distributed, but not mandated, in some Bangladeshi villages and not others
before masks were widely used in the country.
Mask use increased from 10 percent to 40 percent over a
two-month period in the villages where free masks were distributed. Researchers
found an 11 percent reduction in Covid cases in the villages given surgical
masks, with a 35 percent reduction for people over age 60.
Another pandemic study randomly distributed masks to people
in Denmark over a month. About half the participants wore the masks as
recommended. Of those assigned to wear masks, 1.8 percent became infected,
compared to 2.1 percent in the no-mask group — a 14 percent reduction. But
researchers could not reach a firm conclusion about whether masks were
protective because there were few infections in either group and fewer than
half the people assigned masks wore them.
Why aren’t there more randomized studies on masks? We could
have started some in early 2020, distributing masks in some towns when they
weren’t widely available. It’s a shame we didn’t. But it would have been hard
and unethical to deny masks to some people once they were available to all.
Scientists routinely use other kinds of data besides
randomized reviews, including lab studies, natural experiments, real-life data
and observational studies. All these should be taken into account to evaluate
masks.
Lab studies, many of which were done during the pandemic,
show that masks, particularly N95 respirators, can block viral particles.
Linsey Marr, an aerosol scientist who has long studied airborne viral
transmission, told me even cloth masks that fit well and use appropriate
materials can help.
Real-life data can be complicated by variables that aren’t
controlled for, but it’s worth examining even if studying it isn’t conclusive.
Japan, which emphasized wearing masks and mitigating
airborne transmission, had a remarkably low death rate in 2020 even though it
did not have any shutdowns and rarely tested and traced widely outside of
clusters.
David Lazer, a political scientist at Northeastern
University, calculated that before vaccines were available, U.S. states without
mask mandates had 30 percent higher Covid death rates than those with mandates.
Perhaps the best evidence comes from natural experiments,
which study how things change after an event or intervention.
Researchers at Mass General Brigham, one of Harvard’s
teaching hospital groups, found that in early 2020, before mask mandates were
introduced, the infection rate among health care workers doubled every 3.6 days
and rose to 21.3 percent. After universal masking was required, the rate
stopped increasing, and then quickly declined to 11.4 percent.
In Germany, 401 regions introduced mask mandates at various
times over three months in the spring of 2020. By carefully comparing otherwise
similar places before and after mask mandates, researchers concluded that “face
masks reduce the daily growth rate of reported infections by around 47
percent,” with the effect more pronounced in large cities and among older
people.
Brown, who led the review’s approval process, told me that
mask mandates may not be tenable now, but he has a starkly different feeling
about their effects in the first year of a pandemic.
“Mask mandates, social distancing, the other shutdowns we
had in terms of even restaurants and things like that — if places like New York
City didn’t do that, the number of deaths would have been much higher,” he told
me. “I’m very confident of that statement.”
So the evidence is relatively straightforward: Consistently
wearing a mask, preferably a high-quality, well-fitting one, provides
protection against the coronavirus.
It’s also true that the highly contagious Omicron variant is
much harder to avoid, especially because even people masking consistently can
catch it from others in their social circle. Fortunately, Omicron arrived after
vaccines and treatments were available.
Then why all the fuss?
Masks have become a symbol of frustration over shortcomings
in the pandemic response. Some see a lack of mask mandates or a failure to wear
masks as an abandonment of the clinically vulnerable. The pandemic’s burden has
indeed fallen disproportionately on them.
Others have come to think mandates represent illogical
rules. To be sure, we did have many illogical rules: mandating masks outdoors
and even at beaches, or wearing them to enter a restaurant but not at the
table, or requiring children as young as 2 to mask in day care but not during
nap time (presumably, the virus also took a nap). Some mask proponents and
public health authorities have also used weak studies to make overblown or
imprecise claims about masks’ effectiveness.
So how should we evaluate an interview in which the lead
author of the Cochrane review, Tom Jefferson, said of masks that the review
determined “there is just no evidence that they make any difference”? As for
whether N95s are better than surgical masks, Jefferson said, “makes no
difference — none of it.”
It’s no surprise that Jefferson says he has no faith in
masks’ ability to stop the spread of Covid.
In that interview, he said there is no basis to say the
coronavirus is spread by airborne transmission — despite the fact that major
public health agencies have long said otherwise. He has long doubted
well-accepted claims about the virus. In an article he co-wrote in April 2020, Jefferson
questioned whether the Covid outbreak was a pandemic at all, rather than just a
long respiratory illness season. At that point, New York City schools had been
closed for a month and Covid had killed thousands of New Yorkers. When New York
was preparing “M*A*S*H”-like mobile hospitals in Central Park, he said there
was no point in mitigations to slow the spread.
In an editorial accompanying a 2020 version of the review —
the review is in its sixth update since 2006 — Soares-Wiser noted a lack of
“robust, high-quality evidence for any behavioral measure or policy” and said
that “when protecting the public from harm is the objective, public health
officials must act in a precautionary manner to take action even when evidence
is uncertain (or not of the highest quality).”
Jefferson, however, said in the interview that “the purpose
of the editorial was to undermine our work.” Soares-Wiser strongly denied this,
and asserted that her warning in that editorial would apply to this update as
well.
Jefferson has not responded to emailed requests for comment.
As Marr notes, a respiratory virus outbreak with even higher
death rates would cut these arguments tragically short. We need to be better
prepared in many ways for the next pandemic, and one way is to continue to
collect data on mask wearing, despite the challenges.
That, along with an honest assessment of what was done right
and what might have been done better, could go a long way in resolving people’s
questions and doubts.
Masks are a tool, not a talisman or a magic wand. They have
a role to play when used appropriately and consistently at the right times.
They should not be dismissed or demonized.”
Komentarų nėra:
Rašyti komentarą