Cargando…

The introduction of a mandatory mask policy was associated with significantly reduced COVID-19 cases in a major metropolitan city

BACKGROUND: Whilst evidence of use of face masks in reducing COVID-19 cases is increasing, the impact of mandatory use across a large population has been difficult to assess. Introduction of mandatory mask use on July 22, 2020 during a resurgence of COVID-19 in Melbourne, Australia created a situati...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Scott, Nick, Saul, Allan, Spelman, Tim, Stoove, Mark, Pedrana, Alisa, Saeri, Alexander, Grundy, Emily, Smith, Liam, Toole, Michael, McIntyre, Chandini Raina, Crabb, Brendan S., Hellard, Margaret
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8294480/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34288910
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253510
_version_ 1783725242766589952
author Scott, Nick
Saul, Allan
Spelman, Tim
Stoove, Mark
Pedrana, Alisa
Saeri, Alexander
Grundy, Emily
Smith, Liam
Toole, Michael
McIntyre, Chandini Raina
Crabb, Brendan S.
Hellard, Margaret
author_facet Scott, Nick
Saul, Allan
Spelman, Tim
Stoove, Mark
Pedrana, Alisa
Saeri, Alexander
Grundy, Emily
Smith, Liam
Toole, Michael
McIntyre, Chandini Raina
Crabb, Brendan S.
Hellard, Margaret
author_sort Scott, Nick
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Whilst evidence of use of face masks in reducing COVID-19 cases is increasing, the impact of mandatory use across a large population has been difficult to assess. Introduction of mandatory mask use on July 22, 2020 during a resurgence of COVID-19 in Melbourne, Australia created a situation that facilitated an assessment of the impact of the policy on the epidemic growth rate as its introduction occurred in the absence of other changes to restrictions. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Exponential epidemic growth or decay rates in daily COVID-19 diagnoses were estimated using a non-weighted linear regression of the natural logarithm of the daily cases against time, using a linear spline model with one knot (lspline package in R v 3.6.3). The model’s two linear segments pivot around the hinge day, on which the mask policy began to take effect, 8 days following the introduction of the policy. We used two forms of data to assess change in mask usage: images of people wearing masks in public places obtained from a major media outlet and population-based survey data. Potential confounding factors (including daily COVID-19 tests, number of COVID-19 cases among population subsets affected differentially by the mask policy–e.g., healthcare workers) were examined for their impact on the results. Daily cases fitted an exponential growth in the first log-linear segment (k = +0.042, s.e. = 0.007), and fitted an exponential decay in the second (k = -0.023, s.e. = 0.017) log-linear segment. Over a range of reported serial intervals for SARS-CoV-2 infection, these growth rates correspond to a 22–33% reduction in an effective reproduction ratio before and after mandatory mask use. Analysis of images of people in public spaces showed mask usage rose from approximately 43% to 97%. Analysis of survey data found that on the third day before policy introduction, 44% of participants reported “often” or “always” wearing a mask; on the fourth day after, 100% reported “always” doing so. No potentially confounding factors were associated with the observed change in growth rates. CONCLUSIONS: The mandatory mask use policy substantially increased public use of masks and was associated with a significant decline in new COVID-19 cases after introduction of the policy. This study strongly supports the use of masks for controlling epidemics in the broader community.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8294480
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-82944802021-07-31 The introduction of a mandatory mask policy was associated with significantly reduced COVID-19 cases in a major metropolitan city Scott, Nick Saul, Allan Spelman, Tim Stoove, Mark Pedrana, Alisa Saeri, Alexander Grundy, Emily Smith, Liam Toole, Michael McIntyre, Chandini Raina Crabb, Brendan S. Hellard, Margaret PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Whilst evidence of use of face masks in reducing COVID-19 cases is increasing, the impact of mandatory use across a large population has been difficult to assess. Introduction of mandatory mask use on July 22, 2020 during a resurgence of COVID-19 in Melbourne, Australia created a situation that facilitated an assessment of the impact of the policy on the epidemic growth rate as its introduction occurred in the absence of other changes to restrictions. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Exponential epidemic growth or decay rates in daily COVID-19 diagnoses were estimated using a non-weighted linear regression of the natural logarithm of the daily cases against time, using a linear spline model with one knot (lspline package in R v 3.6.3). The model’s two linear segments pivot around the hinge day, on which the mask policy began to take effect, 8 days following the introduction of the policy. We used two forms of data to assess change in mask usage: images of people wearing masks in public places obtained from a major media outlet and population-based survey data. Potential confounding factors (including daily COVID-19 tests, number of COVID-19 cases among population subsets affected differentially by the mask policy–e.g., healthcare workers) were examined for their impact on the results. Daily cases fitted an exponential growth in the first log-linear segment (k = +0.042, s.e. = 0.007), and fitted an exponential decay in the second (k = -0.023, s.e. = 0.017) log-linear segment. Over a range of reported serial intervals for SARS-CoV-2 infection, these growth rates correspond to a 22–33% reduction in an effective reproduction ratio before and after mandatory mask use. Analysis of images of people in public spaces showed mask usage rose from approximately 43% to 97%. Analysis of survey data found that on the third day before policy introduction, 44% of participants reported “often” or “always” wearing a mask; on the fourth day after, 100% reported “always” doing so. No potentially confounding factors were associated with the observed change in growth rates. CONCLUSIONS: The mandatory mask use policy substantially increased public use of masks and was associated with a significant decline in new COVID-19 cases after introduction of the policy. This study strongly supports the use of masks for controlling epidemics in the broader community. Public Library of Science 2021-07-21 /pmc/articles/PMC8294480/ /pubmed/34288910 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253510 Text en © 2021 Scott et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Scott, Nick
Saul, Allan
Spelman, Tim
Stoove, Mark
Pedrana, Alisa
Saeri, Alexander
Grundy, Emily
Smith, Liam
Toole, Michael
McIntyre, Chandini Raina
Crabb, Brendan S.
Hellard, Margaret
The introduction of a mandatory mask policy was associated with significantly reduced COVID-19 cases in a major metropolitan city
title The introduction of a mandatory mask policy was associated with significantly reduced COVID-19 cases in a major metropolitan city
title_full The introduction of a mandatory mask policy was associated with significantly reduced COVID-19 cases in a major metropolitan city
title_fullStr The introduction of a mandatory mask policy was associated with significantly reduced COVID-19 cases in a major metropolitan city
title_full_unstemmed The introduction of a mandatory mask policy was associated with significantly reduced COVID-19 cases in a major metropolitan city
title_short The introduction of a mandatory mask policy was associated with significantly reduced COVID-19 cases in a major metropolitan city
title_sort introduction of a mandatory mask policy was associated with significantly reduced covid-19 cases in a major metropolitan city
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8294480/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34288910
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253510
work_keys_str_mv AT scottnick theintroductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT saulallan theintroductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT spelmantim theintroductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT stoovemark theintroductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT pedranaalisa theintroductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT saerialexander theintroductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT grundyemily theintroductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT smithliam theintroductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT toolemichael theintroductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT mcintyrechandiniraina theintroductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT crabbbrendans theintroductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT hellardmargaret theintroductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT scottnick introductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT saulallan introductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT spelmantim introductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT stoovemark introductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT pedranaalisa introductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT saerialexander introductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT grundyemily introductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT smithliam introductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT toolemichael introductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT mcintyrechandiniraina introductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT crabbbrendans introductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity
AT hellardmargaret introductionofamandatorymaskpolicywasassociatedwithsignificantlyreducedcovid19casesinamajormetropolitancity