Should you wear a mask? Advice for navigating a mask-optional Canada - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:46 PM | Calgary | -11.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Health

Should you wear a mask? Advice for navigating a mask-optional Canada

General mask mandates have been lifted in every province, yet many health authorities still recommend wearing them in public indoor settings. Here's some advice to help you evaluate when and where to don a mask.

Experts who study airborne particles still recommend wearing masks in crowded indoor settings

A woman wearing a mask is pictured in downtown Toronto on April 12, 2022. Cases of COVID-19 are increasing during a sixth wave of the pandemic in Ontario. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

With masks now optional in mostpublic spaces and Quebec recently joining the rest of Canada in relaxing its rules, the mental gymnastics required to figure out whether or not masking is necessary might feel tantamount to performing advanced calculus.

Yet even as the rules shift for where masks are required, some peoplemay still choose to wear them as they did before mandates came into effect.

Tohelp Canadians evaluate what's bestfor their own health and the healthof their loved ones, CBC News asked experts who study airborne particles to weigh in about when, where and for whom masking is still recommended.

Will a mask workif I'm the only personwearing one?

The message from public health officials for much of the pandemic was thatmaskswork best if everyone wears them.

But if you want to protect yourself in an indoor public space where many people will be unmasked, a KN95 or higher offers good protection, according toUniversity of British Columbia mechanical engineering professor Steve Rogak.

Rogak, who is based in Vancouver, studies all kinds of aerosolsand has been testingthe efficacy of different mask materials during the pandemic.

"If you have an N95 mask and you can tell that it's not leaking around the edges and it's nice and snug, I would say that's extremely good protection."

"It's going to capture much more than 90 per cent of the virus, probably more than 99 per cent," Rogak said.

Experts say N95 particulate respirator face masks, like the one seen here, are extremely effective at protecting people from SARSCoV2 infection as long as they fit snugly. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

While an N95 is generally considered the gold-standard of masks and is often used by health-care workers, the material on aKN95 mask is also very effective, Rogak said.

KN95s are the Chinese equivalent of N95s, and Rogak said theywill capture around90 per cent of virus particles as long as they fitwell.

Both Rogak andParisa Ariya, the director of the Atmospheric and Interfacial Chemistry Laboratories at Montreal's McGill University,agreed that mandates being lifted doesn't mean the virus has disappeared.

"We should not close our eyes and believe that everything is gone," said Ariya, who researches the ways in which airborne viruses spread and isa leading expert in the study of bioaerosol transmission.

She compared virus particles to a computer software algorithm even if you can't see it with the naked eye, it still exists and works.

"Viruses are physical entities. Physical bodies. And the mask idea it's nothing new it avoids and decreases transmission."

A well-fitted KN95 mask, like the one seen here, should capture around90 per cent of SARS-CoV-2 virus particles according to Steve Rogak, a mechanical engineering professor who has been testing the efficacy of different masks. (CBC)

Who should consider wearing a mask?

Many public health agencies are still recommending thatCanadians wearmasks in indoor public spaces,especially those at higher risk of having severe outcomes from COVID-19.

In fact, the Public Health Agency of Canada'scurrent guidanceis that everyone keep masking.

"We recommend that you wear a mask in public indoor settings,"the agency's website states.

"You should feel free to wear a mask even if it's not required in your community or setting. This is an appropriate personal decision."

A man wears a medical mask while walking on Toronto's Bloor Street East on May 10, 2022. Most provincial public health authorities recommend that older people and those at higher risk of severe outcomes from COVID-19 continue to wear masks. (Alex Lupul/CBC)

Most provincial public health authorities emphasize thatolder people should continue to wear masks, as well as thosewith certain medical conditions, and people who are pregnant or have recently given birth. Alberta recommends people at risk of severe outcomes wear medical masks, and Ontario's chief medical officer of health strongly recommendseveryone wear masks in indoorpublic settings.

Quebec'sinterim public health director, Dr. Luc Boileau, recently said anyone with COVID symptoms, whether or not they've tested positive, should mask up because "you don't need to be sure that it's COVID" to be prudent.

Where should people consider wearing a mask?

In most provinces, masks are still required in health-care settings and other indoor spaces with vulnerable populations, such as long-term care homes. Some regions, including Alberta, Quebecand Ontario, still require masks on public transit.

Ariya said regardless of what the rules are, she prefers to wear a mask indoors, especially if the space is crowded with strangers.

"When I take the metro, I wear my mask. Is it something that I like to do? Absolutely not, particularly in the summer. But it is about respect," she said.

"When you are more susceptible, or you have a grandmother or mother or family [members] who are immunocompromised, I wouldwearone. I don't think it's too much to do for a loved one."

Rogak agrees and said that personally, he prefers to wear a well-fitted mask any time he's indoors with a lot of strangers.

Masks are now optional in most indoor public spaces in Canada, like the Toronto Eaton Centre mall, pictured here on March 24, 2022. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

"I am comfortable going through a sparsely populated room that's got one or two people at the end the chances of getting it are very slim," he said.

"But if you're going to be stuck in a crowded room for half an hour or an hour with five or six other people, people you don't know, then I'm not comfortable [without a mask]."

Rogak said without mandatory restrictions in place, it'snow up to Canadians to take responsibility for their choices.

To help people make informed decisions based onCOVID-19 trends,the Public Health Agency of Canada recently launched a new online COVID-19 wastewater surveillance dashboard.

The tool is meant to provide people with the data necessary to help make informed decisions going forward.

"The risks haven't changed overnight just because the mask mandate goes away," Rogak said.

WATCH | Masks coming off but COVID-19 not done, doctor says

Masks coming off but COVID-19 not done, doctor says

2 years ago
Duration 6:23
COVID-19 has not gone away, so planning for better air quality indoors is needed, says cardiologist Dr. Christopher Labos. He also thinks many Canadians will choose to continue wearing masks.