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“We tested neck gaiters with more conventional methods, and I am pleased to see that they perform similarly to cloth masks and very well if doubled over,” Marr wrote on Twitter. FACE MASKS
ARE MOST EFFECTIVE WHEN WORN BY ALL In recent months public health experts have stressed the importance of wearing face masks as a way to deter the spread of the coronavirus, especially by
asymptomatic carriers, or people who don’t know they have the virus because they never develop symptoms. Face coverings act as a barrier by helping to keep respiratory particles from
escaping an infected individual and landing on another person. “Just speaking lets these particles get out, and these particles can carry viruses,” including the virus that causes COVID-19,
explains Eric Westman, M.D., an associate professor of medicine at Duke University School of Medicine and a coauthor of the study. And knowing which masks are best at blocking these
particles can help guide consumer decisions that affect the spread of the virus, he adds. The researchers designed a setup consisting of a box, a laser, a lens and a cellphone camera to test
the masks. Want to know how your mask fares? You don’t need a team of Duke scientists and a high-powered laser to find out. A quick and easy way to tell if a mask is good at blocking
particles is to pull it tightly and hold it up to the sky. “If you can see daylight through the mask, it’s not so good. Or if you can take it and blow really hard, and [your air] just goes
right through, that’s not blocking much,” Westman says. His advice to the general public, and especially to those concerned about their risk of severe illness from a coronavirus infection,
is to “wear the best one that you can.” If a standard three-layer surgical mask is available to you — and some are now showing up on store shelves — go for it. But know that your
double-layer DIY cotton mask is also fine in the community setting. Just be sure not to wear an N95 mask with a valve, Westman says. These masks release exhaled air, which defeats the
purpose of wearing the mask to protect others. Westman says more research is needed to test mask effectiveness, but in the meantime, the study shows that low-cost options do work. “If
everyone wore a mask, we could stop up to 99 percent of these droplets before they reach someone else,” Westman said in a Duke University news release. “In the absence of a vaccine or
antiviral medicine, it’s the one proven way to protect others as well as yourself.” _Editor’s Note: This article was updated to clarify the most effective and least effective masks,
according to the Duke University study._ How to Make a Breathable Face Mask out of a T-shirt