Professor calls for masks to be mandatory after study finds it leads to six-fold infection drop

The Government should consider making it mandatory for the public to wear face masks in certain settings, according to an immunologist.
Professor calls for masks to be mandatory after study finds it leads to six-fold infection drop
Professor Luke O’Neill said it is time to consider making masks mandatory in Ireland.

The Government should consider making it mandatory for the public to wear face masks in certain settings, according to an immunologist.

A study published in the Lancet journal shows the use of masks can reduce the risk of spreading the virus six-fold.

Meanwhile, Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston halved the number of cases of the virus among staff, when it insisted employees and patients wear them.

On Newstalk radio's Pat Kenny Show, Professor Luke O’Neill said it is time to consider making masks mandatory in Ireland.

“More and more studies are showing us the real evidence that masks work,” he said.

“Because of course there was circumstantial evidence which we all liked the look of. But now we are seeing real evidence in the Lancet.

There was six-fold decrease risk overall from mask-wearing if you look at the numbers. That is a big effect isn’t it – you would take that.

He added that the hospital in Boston brought in mandatory mask-wearing on March 25.

“They didn’t change anything else in that period,” he said. “That is a really good scientific study showing mask-wearing as having a big effect.

“So, both of those studies make it even more compelling, as we have said all along anyway, that masks are a great thing.

“The next question is should we mandate them because people are not wearing them?

“When I am out and about in shops and so on, there are not many people wearing them. So, we will have to move towards making them mandatory.”

He said mandatory masks would allow health officials to seriously consider a reduction in the two-metre social distancing rule.

“Definitely if you go to one metre, there is a much higher risk compared to two metres,” he said. “They have real numbers on that.”

“But that is without masks remember. So, one thing that is for definite, if you want to go to one metre, you better wear a mask because now you are up close.

“That might be the recommendation, you would be allowed to go to one metre as long as you’re wearing a mask.”

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