Experts
are now
recommending
medical
grade
masks to
protect
yourself
against
COVID-19.
(Photo
Illustration
by
Justin
Sullivan/Getty
Images) |
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FILE-
Retired
U.S. Air
Force
Col.
Charles
McGee, a
Tuskegee
Airman
and a
decorated
veteran
of three
wars,
flies a
Cirrus
SF50
Vision
Jet with
assistance
from
pilot
Boni
Caldeira
during a
round
trip
flight
from
Frederick,
Md., to
Dover
Air
Force
Base in
Delaware
on. Dec.
6, 2019.
McGee,
one of
the last
surviving
Tuskegee
Airmen
who flew
409
fighter
combat
missions
over
three
wars,
died
Sunday,
Jan. 16,
2022. He
was 102.
(AP
Photo/David
Tulis,
File) |
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White
House to
distribute
400
million
free N95
masks
starting
next
week
Lena
H. Sun,
Dan
Diamond
washingtonpost.com
WASHINGTON
- The
Biden
administration
plans to
distribute
400
million
high-quality
N95
masks
for
adults
free of
charge
at
thousands
of
pharmacies
and
other
locations
starting
next
week, a
White
House
official
said.
With
the
highly
transmissible
omicron
variant
of the
coronavirus
spurring
record
levels
of
infections
and
hospitalizations,
public
health
experts
have
repeatedly
said
masking,
especially
with
superior-quality
products,
is an
important
tool to
control
spread
of the
airborne
virus.
The
distribution
of the
masks is
the
largest
deployment
of
personal
protective
equipment
in U.S.
history,
said the
White
House
official,
who
spoke on
the
condition
of
anonymity
ahead of
a formal
announcement.
The N95
masks
will
come
from the
government’s
Strategic
National
Stockpile
and will
be given
out at
tens of
thousands
of
pharmacies
and
federal
community
health
centers,
the same
locations
where
Americans
have
received
their
vaccinations.
U.S.
officials
are
starting
to ship
masks at
the end
of this
week.
The
masks
will be
available
at
pharmacies
and
community
health
centers
late
next
week.
The
program
will be
fully up
and
running
by early
February.
There
will be
three
masks
available
per
adult.
Also,
“we
anticipate
making
additional,
high-quality
masks
for
children
available
in the
near
future,”
the
official
said.
N95
and
KN95s
are
known as
respirators
that
filter
out most
virus
particles
— and
come
with
markings
to
indicate
they are
authentic.
Both
types of
masks
must
form a
seal to
the face
to work
properly.
As mask
mandates
lift,
we're
going to
have to
decide
whether
or not
to wear
a mask
indoors.
(Monica
Rodman/The
Washington
Post)
The
announcement
comes
after
the
Centers
for
Disease
Control
and
Prevention
provided
its most
explicit
guidance
to date
Friday
on the
protection
offered
by
masks.
Well-fitting
respirators,
such as
the N95
products
that are
approved
by the
National
Institute
for
Occupational
Safety
and
Health,
“offer
the
highest
level of
protection”
at
reducing
the
spread
of the
virus,
compared
with
cloth
coverings
and
other
masks.
The
United
States
has more
than 750
million
N95
masks in
the
stockpile.
Unlike
earlier
in the
pandemic
when
severe
shortages
of
personal
protective
equipment
affected
hospitals,
forcing
hospital
staff to
make
homemade
face
shields
and use
bandannas,
an ample
supply
of
high-quality
masks
exists
for
health-care
workers,
officials
said.
Those
masks
are also
widely
available
to the
public
online
and in
stores.
President
Biden
announced
last
week
that the
administration
would
make
high-quality
masks
available
free to
all
Americans.
Outside
experts,
including
former
CDC
director
Tom
Frieden,
for some
time
have
urged
the use
of N95
masks,
noting
that
wearing
such
masks is
particularly
important
for
people
who are
older or
immunocompromised,
especially
if those
around
them are
not
masked.
Julia
Raifman,
an
assistant
professor
at
Boston
University,
said
every
Group of
Seven
country
has a
mask
mandate
or
widespread
mask-wearing
except
the
United
States.
“After
surges
in July,
November,
and
December,
we
should
expect
to see
more
surges
and know
that new
variants
could
evade
vaccines,”
Raifman
said in
an
email.
“We
should
prepare
to have
enough
N95 and
KN95
masks
and
tests
for
everyone
in
future
surges.
We
should
implement
data-driven
mask
policies
so that
mask
policies
automatically
turn on
and
better
protect
everyone
and our
society
during
surges.”
While
N95
respirators
offer
the
strongest
protection,
some
experts
said the
masks
can be
difficult
to
breathe
through
and come
in
different
sizes.
“For
most of
us, we
really
feel a
well-fitting
mask is
the key
point,”
said Ann
Marie
Pettis,
president
of the
Association
for
Professionals
in
Infection
Control
and
Epidemiology.
Double-masking,
or using
a mask
fitter
or brace
over a
mask,
can
often
provide
a
snugger
seal,
she
said.
Ezekiel
J.
Emanuel,
a
University
of
Pennsylvania
bioethics
specialist
who
advised
Biden’s
transition
team on
the
coronavirus,
has
argued
that
masks
offer
additional
protection
while
normalizing
the use
of face
coverings.
In
an
interview
Tuesday,
Emanuel
stressed
that
high-quality
masks
such as
N95s
were
essential
to ward
off the
fast-moving
omicron
variant.
“Everyone
wearing
N95
masks is
the
single
biggest
thing we
could do
to
reduce
transmission,”
Emanuel
said.
“It
reduces
what’s
going
out, and
it
blocks
what’s
coming
in.”
Emanuel
requires
his
students
to wear
N95
masks in
class,
handing
out
fresh
masks
every
month
and
paying
for them
out of
his
research
budget.
In
articles
this
month,
Emanuel
and
other
former
Biden
advisers
called
on the
administration
to make
high-quality
face
coverings
“readily
available
to all
US
residents
for free
or very
low
cost.”
After
the
articles’
publication,
Biden
officials
last
week met
with
Emanuel
to
discuss
his
recommendations.
“This is
a big
step
forward,”
Emanuel
said,
hailing
the
Biden
administration’s
announcement.
“It’s
taken
two
years,
but it
appears
we’re
getting
it
right,
finally.”
Anne
Miller,
executive
director
of
Project
N95, a
nonprofit
organization
that
distributes
free
N95s and
children’s
masks in
the
United
States,
said in
a
statement
the
group
supported
the
White
House
decision,
calling
it “an
unprecedented
move to
help
protect
the
American
public.”
Although
there is
now no
shortage
of the
masks,
she
said,
access
to them
has not
been
universal
because
of cost
and lack
of
awareness.
The
CDC says
“loosely
woven
cloth
coverings”
offer
the
least
protection.
Well-fitting
disposable
surgical
masks
and KN95
masks
offer
more
protection.
Well-fitting
respirators,
including
N95
masks,
offer
the
highest
level.
N95
respirators
are
designed
to
filter
at least
95
percent
of
particles,
as their
name
implies.
KN95s
are
supposed
to meet
a
comparable
Chinese
standard,
but
there is
no
Chinese
regulatory
agency
ensuring
that,
Miller
has
said.
But some
U.S.
firms
make
high-quality
KN95s,
she has
said.
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