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Masks With Valves And Face Shields Allow the Spread Of Covid-19, Reveals New Study

Representative Image

Representative Image

According to the study, face shields block the initial forward motion of the virus, but can not fully protect from the transmission of the virus due to light ambient disturbances.

People wearing plastic face shields or masks fitted with a valve can spray invisible droplets over a very wide area when they sneeze or cough, making the devices ineffective at preventing the spread of coronavirus when used on their own, a simulation model shows.

In a report published Tuesday in the US journal Physics of Fluids, researchers at Florida Atlantic University used vertical and horizontal laser sheets to track tiny droplets of distilled water and glycerin as they spread from a hollow mannequin head fitted with a plastic face shield or a mask with a breathing valve on it.

The face shield initially blocks the passage of the droplets as they move forwards, but "the expelled droplets can move around the visor with relative ease and spread out over a large area," the researchers said.

As for a mask with a valve fitted to make breathing easier, "a large number of droplets pass through the exhale valve unfiltered, which makes it ineffective in stopping the spread of the COVID-19 virus if the person wearing the mask is infected."

The researchers concluded that despite the comfort that both types of protection offered, high-quality cloth or medical masks of plain design are preferential in helping prevent the spread of the virus.

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