by Guy Gin
December 05,
2023
from
GuyGin Website
A new systematic review has been published in Archives of Disease in
Childhood, one of the journals of the British Medical Journal, by
Johanna Sandlund et al. titled 'Child
Mask Mandates for COVID-19 - A Systematic Review'.
Since no randomized controlled trials have even been conducted on
child
mask-wearing or mask mandates, the authors systematically
reviewed observational studies and included 22 in the final
analysis:
six found child mask mandates were associated with lower
rates of infection; the other 16 didn't...
But the studies that found they didn't weren't just greater in
quantity; they were higher quality too.
Of the six studies
reporting a significant negative correlation between masking and
COVID-19 cases, five had critical and one had serious ROB [risk
of bias].
Of the 16 studies
failing to find a significant correlation,
-
1 (6.3%) had
critical
-
10 (62.5%) had serious
-
5 (31.3%) had moderate
-
none had low ROB...
In short, almost all
studies with critical ROB had pro-mask results, while all studies
with moderate ROB did not.
Table 2 below gives a
breakdown of the various types of bias the reviewers found.
The six studies with
pro-mask results are listed first.
All six studies (20
,21
,22
,23
,24
,25)
reporting a negative association were potentially confounded by
crucial differences between masked and unmasked groups,
including the number of instructional school days, differences
in school size, systematic baseline differences in case rates in
all phases of the pandemic, testing policies, contact-tracing
policy differences and teacher vaccination rates.
Almost all these
confounds seem to apply to the worst of the bunch,
Jehn et al., who found,
"the odds of a
school-associated COVID-19 outbreak in schools without a mask
requirement were 3.5 times higher than those in schools with an
early mask requirement".
Unfortunately, this study
was so bad even pro-maskers interviewed by,
the Atlantic said it was
embarrassing.
Among its many problems
was that even though the study period was July 15th to August 31st
2021,
"Some [schools]
didn't begin class until August 10th; others were open from July
19th or July 21st.
That means students
in the latter group of schools had twice as much time - six
weeks instead of three weeks - in which to develop a Covid
outbreak."
No wonder the researchers
didn't want to share the raw data.
That study was published in the U.S. CDC's in-house propaganda rag
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, but even prestigious
peer-review journals like the Journal of the American Medical
Association (JAMA) have published similar rubbish by pro-mask
scientists who gerrymandered results through a conveniently selected
study design, as Sandlund et al. explain.
The Boston
observational study [Cowger
et al.] stated they could infer causality between
lifting school mask mandates and increases in student and staff
cases by using a difference-in-differences technique.
However, a subsequent
reanalysis called the methodology and results of this study into
question and failed to find the same association when expanding
the population to include the entire state or using different
statistical analysis and also found the initial study's results
were likely confounded by differences in prior infection rates
(source).
Interestingly, whereas as
all pro-mask studies with critical risk of bias were done in North
America (five in the U.S.; one in Canada), most of the studies with
the lowest risk of bias were done in Europe.
In a Spanish study of
almost 600 000 children, the researchers did not find a
significant difference in cases between unmasked five-year-olds
and masked six-year-olds; instead, case rates correlated closely
with the age of children, (source)
which was also observed in another Spanish study (source)...
A lack of significant
association between masking children and risk of COVID-19 was
also reported by the U.K. Department of Education...
A Finnish study
compared case rates in children with and without mask mandates
in 10-12 year-olds, and the authors found no reduction in
COVID-19 case rates when mask recommendations were extended to
include 10-12 year olds. (source)
All this means that
Sandlund et al. come to the inevitable conclusion that "real-world
effectiveness of child mask mandates against SARS-CoV-2 transmission
or infection has not been demonstrated with high-quality evidence".
But the issue of child mask mandates isn't just about mask
effectiveness:
it's about potential harms too, such as negative
effects on language learning and communication.
Mask wearing causes
reduced word identification and impedes the ability to teach and
evaluate speech.
There is a link
between observation of the mouth and language processing, and
people of all ages continue to focus on the mouth when listening
to non-native speech.
Masks may also have
negative psychological effects on children too.
There is also
evidence that masks hinder social-emotional learning and
language/literacy development in young children.
Children with
special-education needs and autism may be disproportionately
impacted by mask requirements as they rely heavily on facial
expressions to pick up social cues.
Misinterpretation of
facial expressions increases anxiety and depression in
individuals.
School environments
with mask mandates were also found to have increased anxiety
levels compared to those without mandates.
Additionally, the
physiological effects of masks may be worse for children than
adults.
In addition, mask
wearing has been associated with physiological harm - many of
which are more frequently reported in children than in adults -
which may have multiple negative downstream effects, including
reduced time and intensity of exercise, additional sick days,
reduced learning capacity, and increased anxiety.
Masking has also been
found to lead to rapid increase in CO2 content in
inhaled air - higher in children than in adults - and to levels
above acceptable safety standards for healthy adult workers,
which may rise further with physical exertion.
This leads to a simple
cost-benefit analysis of child mask mandates.
In conclusion, Sandlund
et al. recommend that,
"Adults who work with
children should be educated about the lack of clear benefits and
the potential harms of masking children".
Even though it would be
too little too late, it'd be nice if some of the various governments
around the world that forced kids to mask followed this
recommendation.
It's a shame they
won't...
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