Tuesday, May 31, 2022

The Morning: Why masks work but mandates haven’t

And what to do now that cases are rising.

Good morning. Masks work. So why haven't Covid mask mandates made much difference?

Aristotle, inverted

Covid cases and hospitalizations are rising again in the U.S., and deaths are starting to rise, too. In response, many people are understandably asking what the country can do to minimize the virus's toll in the weeks ahead.

Chart shows 7-day daily average. Data as of May 29. | Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

So far, a lot of discussion has focused on mask mandates. Schools in Philadelphia; Providence, R.I.; Berkeley, Calif.; and Brookline, Mass., have reimposed theirs, as have several colleges. Elsewhere, some people are frustrated that officials, like New York City's mayor, Eric Adams, have not done so.

Critics have accused these leaders of a lack of political courage, saying that they are yielding to Covid fatigue rather than imposing necessary public health measures. But I think that the criticism misreads both the history of public health and the recent scientific evidence about mask mandates.

The evidence suggests that broad mask mandates have not done much to reduce Covid caseloads over the past two years. Today, mask rules may do even less than in the past, given the contagiousness of current versions of the virus. And successful public health campaigns rarely involve a divisive fight over a measure unlikely to make a big difference.

The evidence

From the beginning of the pandemic, there has been a paradox involving masks. As Dr. Shira Doron, an epidemiologist at Tufts Medical Center, puts it, "It is simultaneously true that masks work and mask mandates do not work."

To start with the first half of the paradox: Masks reduce the spread of the Covid virus by preventing virus particles from traveling from one person's nose or mouth into the air and infecting another person. Laboratory studies have repeatedly demonstrated the effect.

Given this, you would think that communities where mask-wearing has been more common would have had many fewer Covid infections. But that hasn't been the case.

In U.S. cities where mask use has been more common, Covid has spread at a similar rate as in mask-resistant cities. Mask mandates in schools also seem to have done little to reduce the spread. Hong Kong, despite almost universal mask-wearing, recently endured one of the world's worst Covid outbreaks.

Advocates of mandates sometimes argue that they do have a big effect even if it is not evident in populationwide data, because of how many other factors are at play. But this argument seems unpersuasive.

After all, the effect of vaccines on severe illness is blazingly obvious in the geographic data: Places with higher vaccination rates have suffered many fewer Covid deaths. The patterns are clear even though the world is a messy place, with many factors other than vaccines influencing Covid death rates.

Yet when you look at the data on mask-wearing — both before vaccines were available and after, as well as both in the U.S. and abroad — you struggle to see any patterns.

Almost 30 percent

The idea that masks work better than mask mandates seems to defy logic. It inverts a notion connected to Aristotle's writings: that the whole should be greater than the sum of the parts, not less.

The main explanation seems to be that the exceptions often end up mattering more than the rule. The Covid virus is so contagious that it can spread during brief times when people take off their masks, even when a mandate is in place.

Airplane passengers remove their masks to have a drink. Restaurant patrons go maskless as soon as they walk in the door. Schoolchildren let their masks slide down their faces. So do adults: Research by the University of Minnesota suggests that between 25 percent and 30 percent of Americans consistently wear their masks below their nose.

Maskless travelers on a plane last week.Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

"Even though masks work, getting millions of people to wear them, and wear them consistently and properly, is a far greater challenge," Steven Salzberg, a biostatistician at Johns Hopkins University, has written. Part of the problem, Salzberg explains, is that the most effective masks also tend to be less comfortable. They cover a larger part of a person's face, fit more snugly and restrict the flow of more air particles.

During an acute crisis — such as the early months of Covid, when masks were one of the few available forms of protection — strict guidelines can nonetheless make sense. Public health officials can urge people to wear tightfitting, high-quality masks and almost never take them off in public. If the mandate has even a modest benefit, it can be worth it.

But this approach is not sustainable for years on end. Masks hinder communication, fog glasses and can be uncomfortable. There is a reason that children and airline passengers have broken out in applause when told they can take off their masks.

In the current stage of the pandemic, there are less divisive measures that are more effective than mask mandates. Booster shots are widely available. A drug that can further protect the immunocompromised, known as Evusheld, is increasingly available. So are post-infection treatments, like Paxlovid, that make Covid less severe.

(For young children, who are not yet eligible for the vaccine, Covid is overwhelmingly mild, similar in severity to the flu.)

Continuing to expand access to these treatments can do more to reduce Covid hospitalizations and deaths than any mask rule probably would. "People have the wherewithal to protect themselves," Dr. Robert Wachter, chair of the medicine department at the University of California, San Francisco, told me. Absent a much larger surge in Covid hospitalizations, he added, the case for mandates is weaker than it used to be.

Dr. Aaron Carroll, the chief health officer of Indiana University, recently wrote for The Times's Opinion section: "Instead of continuing to bicker about things that have become hopelessly politicized like mask mandates, those in public health could focus on efforts that might make much more of a difference."

The available data also suggests that more than half of Americans have had Covid in the past six months, making many of them unlikely to contract it again now. As Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiologist at Brown University, told Vox: "Many of the people who are not wearing masks have already had Covid, so they're like, 'I've been vaccinated, I already had it — how much longer do you want me to do this for?' And it's kind of hard to say, 'No, you absolutely must wear it.'"

One-way masking

The country is probably never going to come to a consensus on masks. They have become yet another source of political polarization. Democrats are more likely to wear masks than Republicans, and Democrats who identify as "very liberal" are more likely to support mandates.

Fortunately, the scientific evidence points to a reasonable compromise. Because masks work and mandates often don't, people can make their own decisions. Anybody who wants to wear a snug, high-quality mask can do so and will be less likely to contract Covid.

If anything, that approach — one-way masking — is consistent with what hospitals have long done, as Doron, the Tufts epidemiologist, points out. Patients, including those sick with infectious diseases, typically have not worn masks, but doctors and nurses have. "One-way masking is how we have always used them," she wrote.

The same system can work for Covid outside of hospitals. Wachter, for example, believes that the time for mandates has passed but still wears one at the supermarket, in classrooms, on airplanes and elsewhere. Different people can reasonably make different choices.

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MORNING READS

The Cuban boxer Osvel Caballero, right, and Jhosman Reyes of Mexico.Todd Heisler/The New York Times

Professional boxing: Cuba steps from amateur glory into the prize fighting chase.

Start-up culture: The end of the "girlboss"?

Trilobites: Dinosaurs started out hot. Then some of them turned cold.

A Times classic: Stop being so hard on yourself.

Advice from Wirecutter: The best — and quietest — air-conditioner.

Lives Lived: Kenny Moore, a two-time Olympic marathon runner, used his understanding of athletes to become a pre-eminent track writer at Sports Illustrated for nearly 25 years. He died at 78.

ARTS AND IDEAS

The United We Eat staff in Missoula, Mont.Janie Osborne for The New York Times

A kitchen run by refugees

A weekly program where immigrants cook takeout meals, called United We Eat @Home, has turned Ghalia Ahmad Fayez AlMasri into a local celebrity in Missoula, Mont. "When I cook, my meal goes very, very fast — 15 minutes this time," AlMasri, who fled Syria in 2017, told The Times.

The program has helped refugees apply for farmers' market permits and find restaurant jobs. And it has diversified the city's dining scene: Without it, there would be no place for Missoulians to order Congolese, Pakistani or Guinean food. Here's more about the program, as well as mouthwatering photos.

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

What to Cook
Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times

Baba ghanouj, grilled eggplant purée, has a smoky flavor.

What to Read

David Sedaris, the chronicler of dysfunctional families and oddball enthusiasms, has a new essay collection, "Happy-Go-Lucky."

Concerts

Abba is back onstage in London. (Well, sort of.) The Times critic called it "triumphantly fun."

Now Time to Play

The pangram from yesterday's Spelling Bee was entombed. Here is today's puzzle.

Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Chutzpah (five letters).

And here's today's Wordle. After, use our bot to get better.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — David

P.S. The word "unputdownability" — praise for a book — appeared for the first time in The Times recently.

"The Daily" is about the police response in Uvalde, Texas. "The Ezra Klein Show" provides a conservative take on Roe v. Wade.

Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti, Ashley Wu and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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Monday, May 30, 2022

The Morning: A summer preview

Food, movies, travel, books and sports for the season.

By the staff of The Morning

Good morning. We've got some recommendations for the start of summer.

Pioneer East Meadow in San Francisco.Jason Henry for The New York Times

Getaways and cookouts

This holiday weekend is the unofficial start of summer, and we're turning today's newsletter into a summer preview. We'll cover food, travel, books, sports and movies.

Travel

Many Americans are starting to travel again. "The travel rebound is shaping up to be even stronger than airlines expected," our colleague Niraj Chokshi reported last week. Even so, traveling this summer won't be completely normal.

If you're returning to the U.S. from another country, you will need a negative Covid test to board your plane. Some other countries, including Canada and Britain, have lifted their testing rules.

Be aware that airlines can legally cancel flights and place passengers on less convenient routes, with layovers. Those disruptions have seemed to become more common in the past two years, because of crew illnesses and aircraft shortages. Our columnist has advice on how to avoid them.

One big tip: Don't assume that old travel patterns will necessarily continue. Public transit schedules may have changed since the start of the pandemic. Renting a car may be more expensive or require longer wait times. Beach houses may be harder to find in some places and easier in others.

And what should you do if you haven't yet decided what to do? The Times is running a series — A Summer of Cycling Around the Globe — with reports on Vancouver; Vermont; Alaska; Hawaii; a 150-mile journey from Italy to Croatia; and seven cities around the world that are fun to explore on a bike.

Food

Armando Rafael for The New York Times

The summer is barbecue season, and The Times's Genevieve Ko has some recommendations that are meant to be prepared ahead of time. That way, you don't need to be working in the kitchen while everyone else is having fun. Other dishes (like these hamburgers) are best grilled while you're talking to your guests.

The ultimate advance-preparation meal is a picnic, and David Tanis has plenty of advice.

Some of Sam Sifton's recommended dishes for Memorial Day will also work for the rest of the summer: jalapeño grilled pork chops and brown sugar-cured salmon. Other staples for today include reverse-seared steak, broccoli salad (if you're looking for some vitamins) and a strawberry galette for dessert.

Sam encourages people to remember that Memorial Day is a holiday with a purpose. "I always make sure to pay my respects to those who died in service to the nation before I get to the brats and beer," he said. We encourage you to read this profile of Sgt. Nicole Gee and Sgt. Johanny Rosario Pichardo, two Marines killed while helping evacuate Kabul last year.

Movies

In the '80s, Pete Mitchell was a brash upstart striving to stand out in the elite Top Gun program. Now he's a captain in the Navy, and he's one of the best fighter pilots.

Times have changed, but Pete's still got it — as does Tom Cruise, who played the character in the original "Top Gun" and in the sequel, "Top Gun: Maverick," a classic summer action movie that premiered last week. "On the brink of 60," the critic A.O. Scott writes, Cruise "still projects the nimble, cocky, perennially boyish charm that conquered the box office in the 1980s." Here's The Times's review, the trailer and a profile of Cruise.

Also this summer: "Thor: Love and Thunder," "Jurassic World Dominion" and "Nope," a Jordan Peele film, top The Times's list of the 101 most interesting movies of the season.

Books

Illustration by Millie von Platen

Before you head to the beach, consult our Books desk colleagues' guide to summer reading. They have 88 books to transport you, including thrillers, historical fiction, romances and cookbooks.

Melissa Kirsch also highlighted literary fiction on the way in the coming months: Mohsin Hamid, Maggie O'Farrell and Jean Hanff Korelitz all have new novels, and 24 years after "Election," Tom Perrotta is bringing back his ambitious high-school protagonist in "Tracy Flick Can't Win." (She's an assistant principal now.)

Here are summer reading guides from The Atlantic, The Wall Street Journal and NPR's "Fresh Air."

Sports

An early event on the summer sports calendar will be a glamorous N.B.A. Finals matchup between the Golden State Warriors and the Boston Celtics. The Warriors have experience on their side: This is the sixth Finals for the star trio of Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green. But the Celtics have youth — their top scorer, Jayson Tatum, is a decade younger than Curry — and an excellent defense.

Shortly afterward, the N.H.L. will stage the Stanley Cup Finals. The Tampa Bay Lightning, the two-time defending champions, are one of five teams remaining, along with the Edmonton Oilers, the Colorado Avalanche, and the New York Rangers and Carolina Hurricanes (who meet for a Game 7 tonight). Edmonton hopes to win the first Stanley Cup for a Canadian team since 1993.

The rest of summer will include tennis Grand Slams, featuring the rising Spanish star Carlos Alcaraz; a W.N.B.A. season that will likely be the last for the legendary Sue Bird; and an M.L.B. season that has Yankees and Mets fans dreaming of another Subway Series.

One footnote: 2022 is a World Cup year, but the tournament won't take place in the summer, for the first time in its history. It begins on Nov. 21 — to avoid the hottest months in Qatar, which is this year's host.

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It's possible for things to get better instead of continually worse: A conversation between Bret Stephens and Gail Collins.

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MORNING READS

Farmers harvesting opium in Afghanistan's Kandahar Province.Bryan Denton for The New York Times

Poppy fields: In Afghanistan, green energy is a boon to the drug trade.

Fleet week: It's no longer just a night out for the boys.

Metropolitan Diary: A museum trip with dad that she never forgot.

Quiz time: The average score on our latest news quiz was 9.3. Can you do better?

A Times classic: How to light a room.

Advice from Wirecutter: Tips to help you waste less food.

Lives Lived: Ronnie Hawkins brought turbocharged rockabilly music to roadhouses from Arkansas to Canada. But his greatest claim to fame might be his backup musicians, who went on to form the Band. Hawkins died at 87.

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

What to Cook
Ryan Liebe for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Victoria Granof.

This lemony cake uses the zest, juice and flesh of lemons.

What to Watch

"Stranger Things" has gone from "lovingly echoing 1980s touchstones to industriously copying itself," the critic Mike Hale writes about Season 4.

What to Listen to

Hear new tracks by Wynonna & Waxahatchee, Superorganism, Rico Nasty and others.

Now Time to Play

The pangrams from yesterday's Spelling Bee were belatedly and debatably. Here is today's puzzle.

Here's today's Wordle. Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Personal growth? (five letters).

If you're in the mood to play more, find our games here.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow.

P.S. Unknown soldiers from World War II and the Korean War were buried at Arlington National Cemetery 64 years ago today.

There's no new "Daily" today. "Sway," is about the new "Top Gun" movie.

Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti, Ashley Wu and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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