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Neither Surgical Nor Cotton Masks Effectively Filter SARS COV-2: Study

by Colleen Fleiss on Apr 9 2020 8:45 PM

Neither Surgical Nor Cotton Masks Effectively Filter SARS COV-2: Study
For preventing the dissemination of SARS-CoV-2 from the coughs of patients with COVID-19, both surgical and cotton masks were found to be ineffective, revealed study published in Annals of Internal Medicine.
A study conducted at two hospitals in Seoul, South Korea, found that when COVID-19 patients coughed into either type of mask, droplets of virus were released to the environment and external mask surface.

During respiratory viral infection, face masks are thought to prevent transmission, leading health care experts to recommend their use during the COVID-19 pandemic. With a shortage of both N95 and surgical masks, which have been shown to prevent the spread of influenza virus, cotton masks have gained interest as a substitute. However, it is not known if surgical or cotton masks worn by patients with COVID-19 prevent contamination of the environment.

Researchers from Asan Medical Center, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea instructed 4 patients with COVID-19 to cough 5 times each onto a petri dish while wearing the following sequence of masks: no mask, surgical mask, cotton mask, and again with no mask. Mask surfaces were swabbed with aseptic Dacron swabs in the following sequence: outer surface of surgical mask, inner surface of surgical mask, outer surface of cotton mask, and inner surface of cotton mask. The researchers found SARS COV-2 on all surfaces.

Media contacts : The lead author, Sung-Han Kim, M.D, can be reached at [email protected] or +82-2-3010-3305.

Source-Eurekalert


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