Wear Masks in Public Says WHO, in Update of COVID-19 Advice

Reuters
By Reuters
June 5, 2020COVID-19
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Wear Masks in Public Says WHO, in Update of COVID-19 Advice
A street vendor arranges facemasks to sell on the roadside as a preventive measure against the spread of the COVID-19 on the outskirts of Hyderabad, India, on June 5, 2020. (Noah Seelam / AFP/Getty Images)

LONDON—The World Health Organization (WHO) updated its guidance on June 5 to recommend that governments ask everyone to wear fabric face masks in public areas where there is a risk of transmission of COVID-19 to help reduce the spread of the pandemic disease.

In its new guidance, prompted by evidence from studies conducted in recent weeks, the WHO stressed that face masks were only one of a range of tools that can reduce the risk of viral transmission, and should not give a false sense of protection.

A woman
A woman wears a face mask as she sells vegetables in the Adjame market of Abidjan on June 5, 2020. (Issouf Sanogo/AFP/Getty Images)

The WHO’s technical lead expert on COVID-19, Maria Van Kerkhove, said in a Reuters interview: “We are advising governments to encourage that the general public wear a mask. And we specify a fabric mask—that is, a non-medical mask.

“We have new research findings,” she added. “We have evidence now that if this is done properly it can provide a barrier … for potentially infectious droplets.”

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People wearing protective masks walk during rush hour on the first day after the Japanese government lifted the state of emergency in Tokyo, Japan, on May 26, 2020. (Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters)

While some countries and U.S. states have recommended or mandated the wearing of face coverings in public, the WHO had previously said there was not enough evidence for or against the use of masks for healthy people in the wider community. It had always recommended that medical masks be worn by people who are sick and by those caring for them.

Britain has said masks will be compulsory for passengers on buses, trains, aircraft, and ferries in England from June 15.

The UN agency’s advice that all healthcare workers dealing with COVID-19 patients, or with suspected cases of the respiratory disease caused by the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, should wear medical masks remains the same, Van Kerkhove said.

But the advice has been broadened to recommend staff coming into contact with any patients or residents in clinics, hospitals, care homes, and long-term residential facilities should also wear masks at all times, she said.

By Kate Kelland

NTD staff contributed to this report.

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