there are other highly qualified folks out there who are pointing out significant issues with this study: — EricH
What the Cochrane review shows is not that masks are useless, nor that governments were wrong to mandate their use. It shows that those who disagreed with the government's policy were normal, rational people who simply had legitimate and well grounded differences of opinion about the best way forward. — Isaac
It doesn't. The studies involved are summarised for you in tables 1, 2, and 3. None of them measured the outcome of the course of the ARI, they only measured contraction. — Isaac
Wearing masks in the community probably makes little or no difference to the outcome of laboratory‐confirmed influenza/SARS‐CoV‐2 compared to not wearing masks
Also, the government in America mandated masks for children against the advice of the WHO. Since when did it become OK to mandate an un-trialled intervention, on children, on the basis of "no evidence that it's not effective"? — Isaac
Children of this age should not wear masks for a long duration or without supervision. — https://www.who.int/news-room/questions-and-answers/item/q-a-children-and-masks-related-to-covid-19
Some countries and regions may have specific policies or recommendations in place. As always, follow the guidance provided by your country or local health department or ministry. — EricH
For vulnerable people like the elderly and chronically ill, it makes sense to keep wearing them. — frank
in a social setting, even 1 person protected means a chain reaction of infections has been forestalled — Agent Smith
Sars cov 2 is so contagious your best efforts will not keep the virus away . It's not a question of if you can avoid the virus, it's only a question of when you get it.
There are still people who believe wrongly that if they mask, if they test religiously, they can prevent their loved ones from getting COVID. That's not true. It's setting them up for disappointment. One day, someone will infect their loved one. It might even be them. The test will be falsely negative. The mask will fail, which is what masks do. — Vinay Prasad - Associate Professor Epidemiology and Health Policy
Fortunately, it hasn't been as dangerous as the 2003 outbreak, which had a 10% fatality rate, and we're fortunate that such a deadly mutation hasn't emerged in this round. — Oct 19, 2022
Children of this age should not wear masks for a long duration or without supervision. — https://www.who.int/news-room/questions-and-answers/item/q-a-children-and-masks-related-to-covid-19
Something odd about the US... — Feb 7, 2023
Prices in the United States are higher than those in all comparison countries — ASPE
'm not aware of the CDC or US government mandating masks for children between 2 & 5. Recommended yes, mandated no. — EricH
given the numerous crises going on in the world, the issue of whether mask wearing was the best strategy for preventing COVID transmission (or minimizing the effects) is wa-a-ay low on my list of things to obsess about. — EricH
Now consider the fact that the chain reaction that could've been initiated by this one person has been avoided — Agent Smith
masking up isn't exactly detrimental. — jorndoe
As a US citizen, what irks me is the vitriol that people hurl at the CDC for simply doing the best they could to keep everyone healthy and alive in a confusing rapidly evolving situation. — EricH
This is pretty much sums up the state our critical facilities have reached now.
We're discussing the peer-reviewed results from one of the most respected scientific establishments in the world.
But the view which prevails is based on "something tells me", and blind faith in a provably industry-biased government institution. — Isaac
I cannot recall a government doing a clever plan against Covid.
I guess Australia was one of the effecientest when they locked down all their frontiers, for example. — javi2541997
I don't know if there was/is any perfect plan. — EricH
complex situation with many moving parts - and any action you take will have some secondary effects — EricH
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