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Impact of community masking on COVID-19: A cluster-randomized trial in Bangladesh.

journal contribution
posted on 2022-01-01, 00:00 authored by Jason Abaluck, Laura H Kwong, Ashley Styczynski, Ashraful Haque, Md Alamgir Kabir, Ellen Bates-Jefferys, Emily Crawford, Jade Benjamin-Chung, Shabib Raihan, Shadman Rahman, Salim Benhachmi, Neeti Zaman Bintee, Peter J Winch, Maqsud Hossain, Hasan Mahmud Reza, Abdullah All Jaber, Shawkee Gulshan Momen, Aura Rahman, Faika Laz Banti, Tahrima Saiha Huq, Stephen P Luby, Ahmed MobarakAhmed Mobarak
Persuading people to mask Even in places where it is obligatory, people tend to optimistically overstate their compliance for mask wearing. How then can we persuade more of the population at large to act for the greater good? Abaluck et al . undertook a large, cluster-randomized trial in Bangladesh involving hundreds of thousands of people (although mostly men) over a 2-month period. Colored masks of various construction were handed out free of charge, accompanied by a range of mask-wearing promotional activities inspired by marketing research. Using a grassroots network of volunteers to help conduct the study and gather data, the authors discovered that mask wearing averaged 13.3% in villages where no interventions took place but increased to 42.3% in villages where in-person interventions were introduced. Villages where in-person reinforcement of mask wearing occurred also showed a reduction in reporting COVID-like illness, particularly in high-risk individuals. —CA

History

Journal

Science

Volume

375

Pagination

1-12

Location

Washington, D.C.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0036-8075

eISSN

1095-9203

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

6577

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science

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