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  • 2020-07-31 (xsd:date)
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  • No, a CDC-WHO study does not prove that masks do not prevent spread of COVID-19 (en)
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  • As Americans argue over whether face coverings stop the spread of COVID-19, a video shared on Facebook makes a stark claim about masks and viruses generally. A 2020 study from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization, the video declares, proves face masks do not prevent the spread of a virus. The video was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.) One of the study’s authors, University of Hong Kong public health professor Ben Cowling, told PolitiFact that the claim amounts to an incorrect interpretation of the study, confusing absence of evidence with evidence of absence. Virologist Angela Rasmussen, a research scientist at Columbia University, said of the study cited in the video: The bottom line is that this paper doesn’t prove that face masks don’t prevent transmission, but that the available data didn’t show a statistically significant effect. The available data is incomplete and more studies need to be done to better understand whether masks are effective at reducing community transmission or not. That is why I continue to wear a mask in public places. What’s known about masks As we’ve reported , facial coverings are not in themselves totally effective in fighting the coronavirus, and there is a need for more study. But health officials largely agree that wearing any kind of face mask, coupled with social distancing and frequent hand-washing, is more protective than going unmasked. The CDC generally recommends wearing masks in public settings where other social distancing measures are difficult to maintain, such as grocery stores, pharmacies, and gas stations. As the CDC puts it : Your cloth face covering may protect them. Their cloth face covering may protect you. The video The 15-minute video was narrated and posted by Ben Swann, who describes himself as a journalist who speaks truth to power! Swann, who has 486,000 Facebook followers, runs TruthInMedia.com, which says it provides content focusing on issues that impact humanity. The video was also shared the same day on YouTube by RT, a news network formerly known as Russia Today that is funded by the Russian Federation. In February 2018, YouTube began labeling state-funded posts and videos promoting conspiracy theories. The step was significant, the Wall Street Journal reported at the time, in part because YouTube has been a major conduit for RT, which U.S. intelligence officials called ‘the Kremlin’s principal international propaganda outlet.’ CDC and WHO ties to the study The study cited in the video was conducted by researchers at the University of Hong Kong — not by the CDC and WHO, as the video claims — although there are affiliations. First published in February, the study appears in the May edition of Emerging Infectious Diseases, a peer-reviewed journal published by the CDC. The study says it was conducted in preparation for the development of guidelines by the World Health Organization on the use of nonpharmaceutical interventions for pandemic influenza in nonmedical settings, and was supported by the WHO. The CDC confirmed it did not participate in the study and would not comment on it, but a spokesman cited a separate CDC study published in July. It looked at clients exposed to two hair stylists who were symptomatic with confirmed COVID-19. Among 139 clients who wore face masks while the stylists also wore face masks, there were no symptomatic secondary cases reported. Among 67 clients who tested for COVID-19, all test results were negative. Adherence to the community’s and company’s face-covering policy likely mitigated spread of COVID-19, the study said. WHO did not provide comment before we published. The study cited in the video reviews flu research The study cited in Swann’s video amounts to a review of research on personal protective equipment and influenza spread. It does not mention coronavirus or COVID-19. After reviewing 10 studies on randomized and controlled trials that were published from 1946 to 2018, the study determined there was no significant reduction in influenza transmission with the use of face masks. That was regarding masks worn by infected persons or by persons in the general community. We did not find evidence that surgical-type face masks are effective in reducing laboratory-confirmed influenza transmission, either when worn by infected persons or by persons in the general community to reduce their susceptibility, the researchers wrote. However, as with hand hygiene, face masks might be able to reduce the transmission of other infections and therefore have value in an influenza pandemic when healthcare resources are stretched. Cowling, one of the study’s authors, told us that because COVID-19 spreads in similar ways as to influenza, the study findings should apply to COVID-19. But University of San Francisco research scientist Jeremy Howard cautioned that influenza and COVID-19 are different diseases, and we do not know whether evidence from influenza trials are relevant to COVID-19. The we did not find evidence phrase doesn't prove either that masks are effective or ineffective, Howard said. He added that it’s important to note that none of the 10 trials reviewed was done during a pandemic. Rasmussen reiterated that this was a systematic review of other published studies and it tells us much of what we already know: there’s not a good evidence base for masks outside of a healthcare setting, but there are still many knowledge gaps, especially regarding mechanisms of transmission. Texas A&M University-Texarkana virologist Ben Neuman said the study reflects the understanding of masks in the early phase of the pandemic, but scientific opinion has shifted because of several important papers published since then. The kicker is, he added, just weeks later, a group with the same senior author, plus some coronavirus specialists, produced a paper demonstrating that masks are indeed highly effective in stopping infected people from releasing airborne viruses. The post claims a CDC study proved that masks do not prevent COVID-19. But it wasn’t a CDC study, and it didn’t prove that masks were ineffective. Scientists are still studying masks and the prevention of COVID-19. We rate the statement False. (en)
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