DOI
10.21037/atm-20-6745
Wearing masks to reduce the spread of respiratory viruses: a systematic evidence mapping
作者地址
Lanzhou Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Evidence Based Social Sci Res Ctr, Hlth Technol Assessment Ctr
通讯作者
Yang, Kehu
来源期刊
Ann Transl Med
ISSN
2305-5839
EISSN
2305-5847
出版日期
2021-05-01
卷号
9
期号
9
页码
811
摘要
Since the outbreak of coronavirus disease in 2019, the controversy over the effectiveness, safety, and enforceability of masks used by the public has been prominent. This study aims to identify, describe, and organize the currently available high-quality design evidence concerning mask use during the spread of respiratory viruses and find evidence gaps. Databases including PubMed, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, EMBASE, WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (ICTRP), clinical trial registry, gray literature database, and reference lists of articles were searched for relevant randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and systematic reviews (SRs) in April 2020. The quality of the studies was assessed using the risk of bias tool recommended by the Cochrane Handbook Version 5.1.0 and the Assessment of Multiple Systematic Reviews (AMSTAR 2) tool. A bubble plot was designed to display information in four dimensions. Finally, twenty-one RCTs and nine SRs met our inclusion criteria. Most studies were of "Low quality" and focused on healthcare workers. Six RCTs reported adverse effects, with one implying that the cloth masks reuse may increase the infection risk. When comparing masks with usual practice, over 70% RCTs and also SRs showed that masks were "beneficial" or "probably beneficial"; however, when comparing N95 respirators with medical masks, 75% of SRs showed "no effect", whereas 50% of RCTs showed "beneficial effect". Overall, the current evidence provided by high-quality designs may be insufficient to deal with a second impact of the pandemic. Masks may be effective in interrupting or reducing the spread of respiratory viruses; however, the effect of an N95 respirator or cloth masks versus medical masks is unclear. Additional high-quality studies determining the impact of prolonged mask use on vulnerable populations (such as children and pregnant women), the possible adverse effects (such as skin allergies and shortness of breath) and optimal settings and exposure circumstances for populations to use masks are needed.
资助信息
the Major Project of the National Social Science Fund of China: "Research on the Theoretical System, International Experience and Chinese Path of Evidence-based Social Science" (Project No. 19ZDA142).
资助机构
国家社科基金委员会
语种
English
国家
学科领域
收录类别
SCIE
WOS学科分类
OncologyMedicine, Research & Experimental
WOS关键词
Author Keywords:COVID-19 ; cloth mask ; evidence mapping ; gap maps ; mask Keywords Plus:HEALTH-CARE WORKERS ; RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL ; INFLUENZA-LIKE ; ILLNESS ; N95 ; RESPIRATORS ; PREVENTING INFLUENZA ; MEDICAL MASKS ; HAND HYGIENE ; METHODOLOGICAL QUALITY ; SURGICAL MASKS ; CLINICAL-TRIAL
被引频次(WOS)
13
研究类型
证据图谱

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