Fact check: Forest falsely says 'masks do not work with viruses'
Lt. Gov. Dan Forest, who's running for governor against incumbent Democrat Roy Cooper, said scientific evidence shows masks don't work. He's wrong.
Posted — UpdatedAt a campaign event in western North Carolina on July 4, the state’s Republican candidate for governor dismissed the need for face coverings during the coronavirus pandemic.
Lt. Gov. Dan Forest, who’s running for governor against incumbent Democrat Roy Cooper, said scientific evidence doesn’t support mask mandates.
Is it true that studies “all said” that masks “do not work on viruses?”
Forest’s statement that they “do not work” ignores recent studies -- and federal healthcare guidance -- showing that mask-wearing does reduce the spread of coronavirus.
What Forest said
While virologist and Trump advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and other experts have said masks alone don’t guarantee protection from the virus, they do believe masks can help slow down the spread of COVID-19.
But, saying “all” studies show no use for masks, Forest left himself no margin for error. So we asked the Forest campaign to cite Forest's sources.
Dunn quoted a line from the authors’ opening statement, which reads: "We know that wearing a mask outside health care facilities offers little, if any, protection from infection." Authors go on to say the purpose of their article is to examine “whether a mask offers any further protection in health care settings in which the wearer has no direct interactions with symptomatic patients.”
Authors later noticed that people were quoting their article to discourage mask-wearing, so they released a follow-up letter to clarify their position.
They acknowledged writing the sentence that Dunn cited, then said: “but as the rest of the paragraph makes clear, we intended this statement to apply to passing encounters in public spaces, not sustained interactions within closed environments. A growing body of research shows that the risk of SARS-CoV-2 transmission is strongly correlated with the duration and intensity of contact.”
Non-pharmaceutical interventions are public health strategies used to reduce virus transmissions. These interventions include home quarantine for infected persons, social distancing, reduction in public gatherings, and masks.
Dunn pointed out that researchers wrote that there are “widely disparate findings on masks' effectiveness in combating viruses.” The study examined existing reports on NPIs, but found that many of the reports were flawed.
Researchers reviewed 100 studies on intervention strategies and found inconclusive results for most of them, including masks. Of those 100 studies, researchers wrote that “only seven met all selection criteria and pooled analysis was not feasible” because they had “significant design flaws.”
Researchers wrote:
“Reduction of viral transmission by non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPI) has a significant appeal and is often recommended. However, the efficacy of such interventions is unclear … Despite the potential for NPI in preventing influenza transmission, there is very limited data available. … Properly designed studies evaluating large populations including ‘at risk’ patients and in a variety of communities are needed.”
That was 2015. Now fast forward to the emergence of COVID-19.
Other studies
Researchers have launched multiple studies on potential methods for stifling the outbreak, finding that masks could help prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus.
When it comes to mask-wearing, Graham said “It’s not that there’s no transmission, it’s that there’s less.”
The CDC, which earlier this year said masks weren’t necessary in public places, changed its guidance on April 3 after studies found that the virus can be spread by asymptomatic individuals. Now, the CDC recommends nearly everyone wear a face covering saying they “help protect people around you” and are “most likely to reduce the spread of COVID-19 when they are widely used by people in public settings.”
PolitiFact has reported on the effectiveness of masks on several occasions, quoting experts who say coverings, when worn properly, can effectively reduce the spread of COVID-19 when combined with other prevention methods such as frequent hand washing and social distancing.
Our ruling
Forest said “there have been multiple comprehensive studies at the deepest level held to scientific standards in controlled environments that have all said for decades, masks do not work with viruses.”
His statement overlooks recent studies, news stories, CDC guidance and the advice of one of President Trump’s top pandemic advisors. While face coverings alone can’t guarantee protection from a virus, recent studies show they do reduce the risk of spreading the virus.
And that’s the goal in this pandemic: to stop the spread. So Forest’s claim that masks “do not work” is inaccurate. We rate his claim False.
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