Wear masks if you want but keep up the hand-washing and physical distancing, say Tam and Hajdu - Action News
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Wear masks if you want but keep up the hand-washing and physical distancing, say Tam and Hajdu

Canada's chief public health officer and health minister say medical-grade masks need to be reserved for the use of front-line health workers but it can't hurt for others to wear homemade masks or fabric face coverings,providedthey do so properly.

Tam says the effectiveness of using non-medical masks in public has not been proven

Health Minister Patty Hajdu and Canada's Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam say Canadians can wear cloth, homemade or other non-medical masks in public if they want as long as they continue to practice measures that slow the spread of the virus, such as frequent hand-washing and physical distancing. (Charles Contant/CBC)

Canada's chief public health officer and health minister say medical-grade masks need to be reserved for the use of front-line health workers but it can't hurt for others to wear homemade masks or fabric face coverings,providedthey do so properly.

"It's absolutely critical that if people are wearing masks outside and it certainly is their prerogative to do that, by the way that we are not taking away masks that are surgical or are specialized that are extremely necessary on the front line, and that we are not using masks in a way ... that is not appropriate," Health Minister Patty Hajdusaid Wednesday.

Dr. Theresa Tam, chief public health officerof Canada, said the supply of medical-grademasks must be preserved for health system workers and thoselooking after patients infected with COVID-19.

"The effectiveness of the use of non-medical masks hasn't really been well demonstrated," said Tam. "But I think that there may not be any harm in wearing it, if one uses it properly it's not gaping, it's really well fitted and youpractice hygienic measures."

Until recently, the federalgovernment was saying that masks are unnecessary for thosenot exhibiting COVID-19symptomsand thatnon-medical masks, or poorly-fitted medical masks, won't filter out the small airborneparticles carrying the virus.

'We could have a false sense of security': Hajdu says of homemade masks

4 years ago
Duration 4:28
Health Minister Patty Hajdu and Canada's Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam say it's up to Canadians themselves to decide whether to wear homemade masks but the science on their effectiveness is uncertain and the best protection against COVID-19 is still physical distancing.

But Tam said that the science on the use of masks and other medical responses to the novelcoronavirus outbreak is changing.

"From a public health perspective, we need to take in evolution in information in science," she said. "We've been doing that, and these are the kinds of things that we discuss as a community of practices in terms of the public health and the chief medical officers."

Ontario Premier Doug Ford said he would continue to take his advice from health officials but that, in his opinion, wearing a mask could be safer than not wearing one.

"Are you safer with a mask? Absolutely, you're safer.I can't stand up here and say you would be safer without a mask, so my opinion, you'd be safer with a mask," he said Wednesday.

"But again, I'm going to stick with the advice of the chief medical officer of health and the medical professionals ..."

Masks have been used extensively in public in countries like China, Japan and South Korea, but the practice is not widespread outside of the region. That changed this week when Austria mandated thatall people entering supermarkets or shops must wearmasks. Other countries, such as Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Bosnia-Herzegovina, have implemented similar measures.

The argument against wearing masks in public were outlined by Hajdu and Tam on Wednesday. They insisted that masks that are not properly fitted will let contaminated particles pass. They also fear that masks could give people a false sense of security, leading them to let importanthygiene measures slide.

Clear guidance on non-medical masks and scarves

4 years ago
Duration 1:59
Chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam speaks about how Canadians can safely use homemade masks or scarves, the evolution of thinking around masks and whether they actually help keep people safe.

"We also know what actually does work already,which is physical distancing," said Tam. "Those droplets fall a certain distance. That's why we've been recommending the two metre distance that actually works. Frequent hand washing absolutely works, not touching your face are absolutely proven measures and everyone should practise those regardless of what else you are adding to those layers of protection."

Tam and Hajdu also warned thatmasks have to be removed so that any contagious particles lodged in themdon't find theirway into someone's mouth or nose.

The upside to wearing masks

Tam said that there areclear positives to the use of non-medical, cloth or homemade masks.

"On the one hand, it might potentially reduce you from touching your nose or your mouth, if you've covered up those parts,"she said. "But you have to be really careful then that you are not putting your finger in you eyewhen you're pulling your mask on and off, that you're [not] touching your face in other ways."

Masks are probably most useful, Tam said, as a way to catch the cough of someone wearing one, so that potentially infected droplets are not being spread around to other people or surfaces.

Tam said that people withCOVID-19who have been asked to isolate but need to go to essential appointments could wear masks to prevent themselves from spreading the virus. Andanyone exhibiting symptoms, even mild ones, could wear a mask for the same reasons.

N95, medical and cloth masks (CBC)

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