A new study has appeared claiming that cloth masks work to reduce the spread of COVID-19 – provided they’re made of three layers of cotton. The Mail reports on its findings.
Researchers at the Indian Institute of Science used synthetic cough droplets to model how well different mask types stand up to coronavirus particles.
They found that surgical and N95 masks are still the most effective at stopping coronavirus spread.
Cloth masks may be a suitable alternative if these masks only if they have at least three layers and are made of cotton, the team found.
These findings may be particularly useful for lower-income countries like India, where surgical masks are not easily accessible to the general population.
In fact, though, the study has not shown anything about the effectiveness of cloth masks to prevent infection. It is not a study of real-world transmission at all but a laboratory test of how masks stop synthetic droplets. These droplets are around 500 micrometres in diameter, so not aerosols, which are typically considered to be much smaller (certainly less than 100 micrometres and possibly less than five). It therefore hasn’t even considered how well the masks impede aerosol transmission, which is one of the main modes of transmission.
Read More: Another Study Claims to Show Masks Work Against Covid – But Does No Such Thing