Some hospitals are bringing back masking - and the general public should consider it this fall too, experts say
As sniffling season falls upon us amid an uptick in COVID-19 cases across the country, should we be bringing masking back in health-care settings and reaching for them more often in our daily lives?
Some hospitals are bringing back stricter masking rules again, and although we’ve probably seen the end of broad masking mandates from governments, some experts say the general public should also be making more use of this tool in our arsenal of measures to fight illness.
- Top coronavirus headlines, all in one place
- COVID-19 Brief newsletter: Sign up for fresh insights and analysis on the pandemic
Last spring, universal mask mandates in health-care settings were lifted in regions across Canada, with some provinces leaving it up to individual hospitals to decide the specifics. Broadly, this meant that patients and visitors were likely not required to wear masks outside of high-risk areas of hospitals, and staff were not required to wear them except in situations where they would have worn a mask before the pandemic, such as operating rooms.
The number of Canadians hospitalized with COVID-19 has been increasing since mid-August, with 2,848 Canadians currently in hospital as of Tuesday.
“Without doubt, we should be masking in hospitals,” Dr. Tara Moriarty, infectious diseases researcher and associate professor at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Dentistry, told CTVNews.ca. in a phone interview earlier this month.
“It should be good quality masks, where people walk in the door and they put the masks on, and those masks stay on for the entire time that they're in the hospital so that you can protect other people who might be sitting in the same waiting room or a patient. If you're visiting someone who's in hospital and and you're not too worried about the person you're visiting, … their roommate might be someone who is particularly vulnerable to being infected with COVID. So we all need to start doing that and not just putting them on when we go into patient rooms.”
Moriarty runs a team tracking COVID-19 levels across the country. Their latest COVID-19 forecast, posted Monday, estimated that one in 29 people in Canada are currently infected with COVID-19.
Some Ontario hospitals have started bringing back more masking requirements this fall due to the impending respiratory virus season.
The Ottawa Hospital and the Queensway Carleton Hospital in Ottawa are now requiring masking in all clinical areas and waiting rooms. The Kingston Health Sciences Centre has made masking mandatory in the emergency department, children’s outpatient clinics and in its urgent care centre.
Last week, the health authority in Quebec’s Eastern Townships also mandated masks in health-care settings again in reaction to a spike in COVID-19 cases.
“As of September 20, more than a hundred CIUSSS de l’Estrie - CHUS staff members were absent due to COVID-19,” the statement reads in French. “In addition, around ten outbreaks are underway in various facilities in the Estrie region, particularly in CHSLDs and hospital centers. In order to limit the spread of the virus within facilities and preserve the health of the most vulnerable and staff, wearing a mask is now mandatory for staff and visitors.”
Moriarty said that masking should be required in clinics as well, but that these aren’t the only places that should consider masks again.
“It would be an excellent idea if other essential places like pharmacies and grocery stores, for example, were to have masking, at least during intense periods,” she said. “Because people do need to eat, they need to get their medications, they may be high risk but they haven't been able to get a new vaccine dose yet, or there's confusion about whether they should get one or not, and so we need to be masking in those settings to protect a lot of people who are particularly susceptible right now.”
It’s an “accessibility issue,” she pointed out, as a lack of masking may limit where a high-risk individual feels safe to go in public, particularly as the weather gets colder and there are less outdoor options.
MASKING AS A HABIT
Changes to the virus over time, as well as widespread vaccine coverage, have gone a long way in making the virus less dangerous overall. But COVID-19 is still far more infectious than other respiratory illnesses, and capable of causing serious illness and even death.
Masking is one of the tools that can lower your risk of contracting the virus or passing it on, and also cut down on the risk of spreading or catching other respiratory viruses as well.
“When masking is done effectively, there is a reduction on an individual level from getting COVID-19, and I don’t think anyone argues with that,” Dr. Zain Chagla, an infectious disease specialist and associate professor at McMaster University, told CTVNews.ca in a phone interview earlier this month.
“The science really hasn't changed in the last three years.”
A broad mask mandate for the general population wouldn’t be helpful at this point considering pandemic fatigue and “the context of wide-scale immunization, immunity, therapeutics,” Chagla said.
But in terms of whether he recommends masks for individuals, that’s a no-brainer – especially for people experiencing symptoms.
“(We’re) trying to really encourage masking amongst high risk individuals who want to add a layer of protection, again, those people who are symptomatic, who have been exposed to COVID-19, or have COVID-19, that have to go back out in the community, that the use of masks (will) help protect others at that point in time as well,” he said.
Someone who has symptoms should definitely be wearing a mask if they have to go out into public, he said.
The heightened emotions around masking at some points of pandemic may have done some damage in establishing it as a habit in times of need, he acknowledged, such as when someone has a cough and simply isn’t able to stay home from work.
“The polarization of masking probably did not do a great job at kind of inspiring people to do it at the times where it probably is the highest yield,” he said. “But I think again, that there is more understanding that masking is an appropriate respiratory intervention.”
“The education is there, there’s at least a cultural context around it. That’s definitely grown from 2020.”
Moriarty pointed out that another reason to wear a mask while out grocery shopping or visiting the pharmacy is that it may help someone else who may be more high-risk than you feel more secure in their mask-wearing.
“A lot of people are embarrassed about masking, they feel uncomfortable about it, they don't see anyone else doing it. They don't want to stand out,” she said. “They don't want to be perceived as someone who is afraid or all those things, right. We're humans and we respond to social pressures.”
She said that in general, she recommends that everyone mask as much as they can right now.
“You don't want to be getting RSV and influenza and COVID,” she said.
“But I really think that we need to make masking required in settings where, people who are particularly vulnerable to or susceptible to severe COVID outcomes, in settings that they cannot avoid.”
With files from The Canadian Press
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

Global Affairs reports Canadian killed in Lebanon in connection with Israel-Hamas war
Global Affairs is reporting the death of another Canadian due to the ongoing Israel-Hamas war. This is the ninth casualty connected to Canada.
This Canadian couple used surrogacy to have a child. Here's what they want you to know
Families that need help conceiving a child are met with financial burdens that should be covered through government health care and insurance, advocates say.
From COVID-19 to alien contact, conspiracy theories are popular in Canada: survey
The Earth is flat. We have been secretly contacted by intelligent beings from other planets. Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin did not land on the moon in 1969. They may sound like bizarre statements, but a new poll suggests a sizable number of Canadians believe in these and other conspiracy theories.
Renowned Quebec entrepreneur, partner reported dead in Caribbean
Quebec entrepreneur Daniel Langlois and his spouse Dominique Marchand have died in their adopted home of Dominica, in the Caribbean, a source has confirmed.
Renowned Canadian musician and former April Wine singer Myles Goodwyn dead at 75
Myles Goodwyn, the award-winning Canadian singer and songwriter who shot to stardom as the former lead singer of April Wine, has died at age 75.
Backlash continues following Moncton’s decision to not display the Menorah this year
Outrage seen from the community and across the country online after the news broke Friday that the City of Moncton would not display the Menorah this year.
Canada issues updated travel advisory for Guyana amid border dispute referendum in Venezuela
Amid a referendum that will see Venezuelans asked about the future of a chunk of neighbouring Guyana that Venezuela currently claims ownership over, Canada has adjusted its travel advisory to warn against travelling in Guyana near the border.
Another inmate dead at notoriously harsh Newfoundland jail, officials confirm
An inmate has died at Her Majesty's Penitentiary in Newfoundland, one of the oldest operating provincial jails in the country, officials with the provincial Justice Department confirmed.
Commercial ships hit by missiles in Houthi attack in Red Sea, U.S. warship downs 3 drones
Ballistics missiles fired by Yemen's Houthi rebels struck three commercial ships Sunday in the Red Sea, while a U.S. warship shot down three drones in self-defence during the hourslong assault, the U.S. military said. The Iranian-backed Houthis claimed two of the attacks.