Financial Times Europe - 04.04.2020 - 05.04.2020

(Nandana) #1

4 ★ FT Weekend 4 April/5 April 2020


Even proponents of face protection
discourage members of the public from
using high-grade gear such as N95 respi-
rators. Surgical masks normally sold in
shops have also been in short supply in
many places, leaving the alternative of
simple cloth masks.
Anthony Fauci, director of the US
National Institute of Allergy and Infec-
tious Diseases, said this week the coun-
try had been “inhibited” from encour-
aging mask-wearing because it did not
want to “take away the supply of masks
from the healthcare workers”.
The balance is shifting as the pan-
demic grows in western countries and
governments hunt down measures to
try to quell it. Sebastian Kurz, Austria’s
chancellor, acknowledged mask-wear-
ing was culturally “alien” but said the
country had to do everything possible so
it could “quickly return to normality
and a functioning economy”.

Asian countries lead the way
The changing policies in some European
countries move them closer to the posi-
tions of Asian counterparts.
While citizens in western countries
such as the US did resort to face protec-
tion during the so-called Spanish Flu
pandemic in 1918, mask-wearing fell
away again once the threat receded.
Many Asian countries, by contrast,
have been sensitised by being on the
frontline of outbreaks of dangerous dis-
eases, notably the Sars virus in the early
2000s. In China, where the outbreak
began, people have been wearing masks
for several months. Xi Jinping, China’s
president, began wearing one in public
in early February.

Potential pitfalls exacerbated in
poor nations
Masks are not a substitute for other
measures to quell the virus’s spread,
such as large-scale testing, physical dis-
tancing and regular handwashing.
Face gear also needs to be changed
regularly to avoid contamination: a par-
ticular potential problem in poor coun-
tries, where people lack the means to
buy new masks or clean old ones. The
protection’s effectiveness can also fall
away with repeated washing.
While some, including US president
Donald Trump, have suggested home-
made protective gear such as scarves,
experts say such ersatz creations are
less effective at stopping droplets.
They can also become damp and thus
apotential vector for infection since
they lack the inner water absorbent
layer used in surgical masks.
On Mr Trump’s scarf idea, Chen Shih-
chung, Taiwan’s health minister, said
the protection offered would be “very
poor”. But he added, in words that
appear increasingly persuasive to the
west: “Anything is better than nothing”.
Additional reporting by Robin Harding
Notebookpage 8

BBC, with the caveats that the new evi-
dence needed to be supported and
masks properly fitted.
Some say donning facial protection is
an act of wider civic duty. “I wear a mask
to protect you; you wear a mask to pro-
tect me,” said KK Cheng, public health
professor at the UK’s University of Bir-
mingham. “At the end, everyone is pro-
tected if enough people do it.”

Western reluctance could change
One reason for western authorities’ cau-
tion about recommending the wearing
of masks has been concern about short-
ages that has already prompted many
countries to increase local manufactur-
ing and scour the world for supplies.
Taiwan this week pledged to donate
10m face masks to areas hit hard by
the pandemic, including the EU and US.

spread of droplets in crowded environ-
ments such as on public transport. They
can help stop the contamination of sur-
faces and goods in supermarkets.
In many European countries, official
advice has concentrated on rigorous
hand hygiene and for people to main-
tain a distance of two metres.
But David Heymann, chair of a WHO
advisory panel on infectious hazards,
said he was considering new
research, including a Massa-
chusetts Institute of Tech-
nology study, suggesting
droplets from sneezes can
travel up to eight metres.
“It might be that wearing
a mask is equally as
effective or more
effective than dis-
tancing,” he told the

M I C H A E L P E E L— B R U S S E L S
K A N A I N AG A K I— TO K YO
K AT H R I N H I L L E— TA I P E I


European countries have begun to
embrace the mass public use of face
masks to combat coronavirus in a grow-
ing trend that mimics longstanding anti-
pandemic measures in parts of Asia.
Austria this week followed Slovakia,
the Czech Republic and Bosnia-Herze-
govina by saying it would be compul-
sory for people to wear the protective
gear outside the home, even though the
World Health Organization does not
recommend such a move.
In a sign that the debate is shifting,
the Centers for Disease Control and Pre-
vention in the US this week said it is was
reconsidering whether to recommend
face gear to the general public, rather
than only those caring for a sick person.


Can masks halt the spread?


Most experts agree wearing a face mask
can stop some virus-laden watery drop-
lets that are thought to be a main coro-
navirus vector and are expelled into the
air when a person coughs, sneezes or
just breathes out. More contentious is
whether they help reduce the risk of a
person becoming infected by inhaling
the virus through their nose or ingesting
via the mouth.
A big problem in determining their
effectiveness has been the lack of proper
clinical trials on the impact of masks on
viral infection rates. Such tests are diffi-
cult to conduct because of the large
number of variables, according to Paul
Hunter, professor in medicine at the
University of East Anglia in the UK.
He said less rigorous studies of flu did
suggest some benefits to mask-wearers.
These were hard to quantify but they
could include preventing you from
touching your mouth or nose and infect-
ing yourself with viruses picked up from
contaminated surfaces.
“The balance of evidence is pointing
towards some protective effect,” said
Prof Hunter. “You have to be careful
about poor quality evidence. But it is not
no evidence.”
Yet some authorities are holding firm
to recommendations not to use them.
“Wearing face masks to prevent coro-
navirus infection only makes sense in
hospitals where patients with the coro-
navirus are treated and in laboratories
where specimens of these patients are
tested,” states Belgium’s official advice.
“For the time being, wearing face masks
in public places has no added value at
all.”


‘Everyone is protected if


enough people do it’


Proponents of masks say
their primary value is less
to protect the wearer than
to prevent that person
from infecting others.
They help curb the


C O R O N AV I R U S


Face mask debate shifts as west looks


to adopt measure long trusted in Asia


Some nations change tack while others rethink whether covering mouth and nose is a lifesaver


Sizes compared


Sources: EPA; FT research

Mask types


Sources: CDC; FT research

How far droplets travel


Sources: MIT; FT research

Cross-sections


Surgical mask N/FFP mask

 metres

 metres

Exhalation

Cough

Up to  metres

Sneeze

Surgical masks oer protection against
large-particle droplets. But they do not
block smaller particles in coughs and
sneezes. They fit loosely and are
intended to be used once

If the mask-wearer has a beard
or facial deformity it can
prevent a seal being formed

A respirator such as the N or FFP forms
a tight seal around the nose and mouth and
is designed to block even small particles. But
it can be ineective if not fitted correctly

Loose
fitting
allows
leakage

Tight-
fitting
seal

Two-way
filtering
valve

* Virus carried in larger droplets that eventually evaporate

Human hair:
- microns (μm)

New coronavirus: μm*

Dust particle: μm

ST E FA N I A PA L M A— S I N G A P O R E

Singapore is to step up its social dis-
tancing measures as it faces a jump in
locally transmitted coronavirus cases.

In the early days of the pandemic, the
city-state was praised for its response as
it successfully contained the spread of
the disease through aggressive testing
and tracing victims’ contacts. Only five
people have died.
But now Singapore is struggling
against a new wave of infection not
linked to previous victims of the
disease.
The south-east Asian country has
1,114 cases of coronavirus, up 52 per
cent from a week ago. Locally transmit-
ted infections with no links to previous
sufferers account for nearly half the
cases reported daily.
Authorities have warned the public to
stay at home and avoid mixing with
individuals outside their households.
People have been told to go out only for
essential services, to buy food or takea-
way meals from restaurants — where
dining-in will be suspended — or for
exercising in parks at a safe distance.
“We have kept the outbreak under
control,” Lee Hsien Loong, Singapore’s
prime minister, said in a national
address yesterday. “But looking at the
trend, I am worried that unless we take
further steps things will gradually get
worse, or another big cluster may push
things over the edge.”
The new measures will run from April
7 to May 4, with the option to extend.
Ooi Eng Eong, deputy director of the
emerging infectious diseases pro-
gramme at Duke-National University of
Singapore Medical School, said the rise
in the number of unlinked cases was “a
little bit worrying”, but he added that
the new measures were more “pre-emp-
tive than necessary”.
Singapore’s schools and universities
will shut from Wednesday next week
while work premises, except for essen-
tial services and those in critical eco-
nomic sectors, will close. Supermarkets,
hospitals, utilities, transport and critical
banking services will remain open.
As well as the new measures on social
distancing, Singapore has also changed
its stance on the wearing of masks. It will
no longer discourage people from using
them, after originally advising that only
individuals feeling unwell should wear
the protective gear.
Some experts believe demographics
have played a part in keeping Singa-
pore’s coronavirus death toll low. Most
of its confirmed cases have been in those
younger than 65.
But Prof Ooi said a recent increase in
younger patients, whose typically
milder symptoms make them more
infectious carriers and harder to detect,
might have contributed to accelerating
local transmission.

G U Y C H A Z A N , JA M E S P O L I T I
A N D V I C TO R M A L L E T


Protective medical equipment made
by US manufacturer 3M and bound for
Germany was intercepted in Thailand
and diverted to the US, in an incident a
senior German official described as
“modern piracy”.


The city of Berlin had ordered special
FFP2 and FFP3 masks used to protect
emergency staff and care workers from
infection with coronavirus. The order
was for 200,000 such masks, according
to German newspaper Tagesspiegel.
Berlin’s interior minister, Andreas
Geisel, confirmed that the consignment
had been “confiscated” in Bangkok and
never reached Berlin.
“We consider that an act of modern
piracy,” he said. “You don’t treat your
transatlantic partners like that.”
News of the confiscation came after


the White House tried to force 3M to
export masks to the US from its hub in
Singapore, as the federal government
moves to secure critical medical sup-
plies needed to prevent the spread of
coronavirus and treat infected patients.
The company this week resisted
demands by White House officials to
send about 10m N95 respirator masks
being produced in Singapore for mar-
kets in Asia to the US, according to a per-
son with direct knowledge of the matter.
On Thursday, President Donald
Trump invoked his authority under a
Korean war-era law, the Defense Pro-
duction Act, with regard to 3M’s N
respirator masks. The Federal Emer-
gency Management Agency (Fema) is
now allowed to use “any and all author-
ity” to buy “the number of N95 respira-
tors” it “determines to be appropriate”
from 3M and its subsidiaries, according
to the wording of the act.

“We hit 3M hard today after seeing
what they were doing with their Masks,”
Mr Trump tweeted on Thursday
evening. “Big surprise to many in gov-
ernment as to what they were doing —
will have a big price to pay!”
In a statement yesterday, 3M said the
company was going “above and beyond”
to boost production of N95 masks for
the US market. It confirmed that the
Trump administration had “requested
that 3M increase the amount of respira-
tors we currently import from our over-
seas operations into the US”, noting that
it had secured the exports from China.
The company also said the adminis-
tration had requested that it “cease
exporting respirators” from the US to
Canadian and Latin American markets,
but said this would also trigger a
humanitarian crisis in those countries
and would end up backfiring on Amer-
ica, since the US would face retaliation.

D E M E T R I S E VA STO P U LO A N D
B R E N DA N G R E E L E Y— WA S H I N GTO N

When the sun rose over New Orleans on
Thursday, residents of the “Big Easy”
learnt that Ellis Marsalis, a legendary
jazz pianist and local hero, had joined
the more than 6,000 Americans who
have died from coronavirus.
His death stunned the city that gave
birth to jazz. But it was also a devastat-
ing reminder that 15 years after Hurri-
cane Katrina ravaged New Orleans, the
city is battling an even deadlier storm.
New Orleans is a hotspot for coronavi-
rus in the US. The state of Louisiana has
reported 9,000 coronavirus cases, only
2,000 fewer than California which has
eight times the population. New Orle-
ans, a city on the Gulf of Mexico, and its
surrounding parishes have 5,300 cases,
and the metropolitan area’s death toll
has topped 230, just below California’s.
Cedric Richmond, a New Orleans con-
gressman, said he could tell how bad
things were without even looking at the
statistics. “Just from the number of peo-
ple that I personally know that are not
making it every day, I think that over the
next 14 days you will see that big spike,”
said Mr Richmond, who is co-chair of
Joe Biden’s presidential campaign.
Just weeks ago, even as the virus had
begun to take hold in the US, crowds of
revellers thronged the streets of New

Orleans to celebrate Mardi Gras. Now
Bourbon Street, famous for its bars and
jazz clubs and the heart of the city’s cul-
tural identity, is boarded up.
“Now the rats in the French quarter
don’t have enough food, so they are
coming out,” said Molly Lindsey, a
local. “There is never a dull moment.”
Two weeks ago, Jay Forman, owner of
Gracious Bakery, had three stores and
60 employees. Now he has one store and
two staff: himself and his wife, Megan.
Katrina was “like a nuclear bomb” but

this is worse, he said. “This is more like
the city got hit by a neutron weapon and
it eradicated everything alive.”
While the streets and restaurants of
New Orleans are emptying, its hospitals
are filling up. One doctor on the front
line who contracted the virus said hos-
pitals had enough beds now, but only
because some were converting wards
into intensive care units. She said staff
were having to wear surgical masks,
which are normally discarded after see-
ing a patient, for two weeks.
In an ominous sign for older residents,
she said only patients younger than 60
seemed to survive after being hooked
up to a ventilator. “The older patients
just don’t come back.”
She said one of the most pressing
questions was just how bad the spike

will be: “We’re not where New York is
right yet, but the next two weeks is going
to determine if we run out of ICU beds,
run out of ventilators.”
The week-long Mardi Gras celebra-
tions, attracting tens of thousands of vis-
itors from all over the world, provided
the perfect conditions for the disease to
spread in New Orleans. The lack of coro-
navirus testing in Louisiana and across
the US masked the problem.
Chris Frederick, a Texan working on
an oil rig in the Gulf, was evacuated to
New Orleans after developing symp-
toms of Covid-19. The helicopter pilot
flying him back to shore wore protective
clothing, but when he was examined in a
hospital in the city, the doctor did not
wear gloves. The paramedic with him
was stunned to watch the scene: “He
was like, ‘Wow does he know that you’re
a potential Covid patient?’”
Beyond the humanitarian crisis, the
pandemic is delivering a crippling eco-
nomic blow. More than 169,000 Louisi-
ana residents filed jobless claims over
the past fortnight, a staggering 3.6 per
cent of the population. The state already
has the third-highest employment rate
in the country, at 5.2 per cent.
Trombone Shorty, one of the world’s
best-known jazz trombonists, said
musicians in his home city were strug-
gling. But he said the people of New
Orleans have a necessary note in their
repertoire: resilience.
“We can get knocked down a million
times, but we roll with the punches,” he
said. “It‘s just another event that hap-
pens in life, but there is no way that the
people of New Orleans will ever give up.”

Medical supplies


Berlin-bound vital equipment diverted to US


Louisiana.Hotspot


New Orleans battles deadly storm


Fifteen years after Hurricane


Katrina caused havoc, the city


of jazz faces another onslaught


Social distancing


Singapore


tightens


rules amid


‘worrying’ rise


in infections


Jazz legend Ellis
Marsalis died from
the virus this
week. He was one
of 9,000 reported
cases in Louisiana

Precaution:
Markus Söder,
the minister-
president of
Bavaria in
Germany, wears
a face mask
during a public
visit on
Thursday

Contracts & Tenders


APRIL 4 2020 Section:World Time: 3/4/2020 - 18: 31 User: john.conlon Page Name: WORLD3 USA, Part,Page,Edition: EUR, 4 , 1

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