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Major Airlines Are Now
Banning This One Type of Mask
YOU MAY NOT BE ALLOWED
ON YOUR NEXT FLIGHT
As a number of COVID
restrictions have come and gone and come back again, one has remained
consistent: You must wear a mask on airplanes. This requirement was instituted
by many airlines early in the pandemic to keep air travel safe, and government
agencies around the world have doubled down on this with their own mandates.
Airlines have issued fines, pulled passengers from planes, and even canceled
entire flights as a result of people flouting mask rules over the last year.
Now, some companies are taking their mandates even further by banning one type
of mask altogether. Read on to find out what face covering could keep you from
being allowed on future flights.
Some major airlines
have banned cloth masks on planes.
Cloth masks have been
widely used by people around the world since the beginning of the pandemic,
becoming particularly popular when medical masks were in short supply for
frontline workers. But this type of face covering may no longer cut it in
certain situations. According to Travel + Leisure, many major international
airlines now ban masks made from cloth fabric, including Finnair, Air France,
Lufthansa, Swissair, Croatia Airlines, and LATAM Airlines. These airlines are
only allowing other, more effective masks, such as N95 masks, KN95 masks,
surgical masks, and respirators without exhaust valves.
Airlines say that cloth
masks are not sufficiently protective.
Finnair is the most
recent airline to have banned cloth masks on Aug. 13, stating that the face
covering is not protective enough. "The safety of our customers and
employees is our first priority. Fabric masks are slightly less efficient at
protecting people from infection than surgical masks," Finnair said in a
statement.
A recent study being
peer reviewed for publication in the journal Science and pre-printed early on
Aug. 13 backs this up. Researchers for this study analyzed more than 340,000
adults from 600 villages in rural Bangladesh, finding that cloth masks did not
perform in the same way as surgical masks. The study authors said that while
they found "clear evidence" that surgical masks are effective at
reducing symptomatic COVID, they could not say the same for cloth masks.
According to the study, surgical masks had a filtration efficiency of 95
percent, while cloth coverings were only 37 percent effective.
"While cloth masks clearly reduce symptoms, we cannot reject that they have zero or only a small impact on symptomatic COVID infections," the authors wrote. "Surgical masks have higher filtration efficiency, are cheaper, are consistently worn, and are better supported by our evidence as tools to reduce COVID-19."
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