Effectiveness of the use of non-woven face mask to prevent coronavirus infections in the general population: a rapid systematic review

Category Broad synthesis / Evidence review
JournalCiência & Saúde Coletiva
Year 2020

This article includes 1 Primary study Primary studies (1 reference) 2 Systematic reviews Systematic reviews (2 references)

This article is part of the following publication threads:
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Abstract Objectives: to evaluate the effectiveness of non-woven face masks for the prevention of respiratory infections (MERS CoV, SARS-CoV, and SARS-CoV-2) in the population. Methods: search in Medline, Embase, Cinahl, The Cochrane Library, Trip databases. Google Scholar, Rayyan and medRxiv were also consulted for complementary results. No filters related to date, language or publication status were applied. Titles and abstracts were screened, and later, full texts were evaluated. Results: three studies were included: a randomized cluster clinical trial and two systematic reviews. The clinical trial indicates a potential benefit of medical masks to control the source of clinical respiratory disease infection. In one of the systematic reviews, it was not possible to establish a conclusive relationship between the use of the mask and protection against respiratory infection. Finally, another systematic review indicated that masks are effective in preventing the spread of respiratory viruses. Conclusion: Evidence points to the potential benefit of standard non-woven face masks. For the current pandemic scenario of COVID-19, education on the appropriate use of masks associated with individual protection measures is recommended.
Epistemonikos ID: bdb130fb570a8babd3a33b4d1d908feeed0d10f2
First added on: Sep 04, 2020