There’s probably been no more contentious subject in Ireland over the past six months or so than the question of mandatory facemasks. There are bigger questions, sure, on which the population is more evenly divided – lockdown or no lockdown; schools open, or schools closed; the infernal debate about “wet pubs”, and so on.But no subject provokes more passionate disagreement from a minority of Irish people than the question of wearing a facemask. For most of us, it’s a common sense healthcare measure – we feel safer, we feel like we’re doing our bit, and we feel like it’s not a huge imposition.For a minority, though, this has been the number one cause of resentment and disagreement. To them, facemasks have always been medically useless, as well as an unconscionable imposition on a person’s bodily autonomy. They’re nothing less, in this telling, than a symbol of tyranny.Most people have little sympathy with the latter part of that argument. But what about the first part of it?
As an aside, the second part of the argument in paragraph three brings to mind something I had not considered over the past eight months of the pandemic. For those of us who lived through the abortion debates of the seventies and early eighties, there was a powerful feminist argument - "Our bodies, our choice!"
It had a powerful native logic. Not ultimately the best argument, but a good one. Here in the US, mask resistance has been much more anchored in human rights or efficacy arguments but "My body, my choice!" has a certain persuasive ring to it. Communal health obligations versus individual health choices are not a good analog for one another but the utility of the argument makes it strange to me that there has been little reference to that long ago slogan.
I have been agnostic on masks here. Wait for the evidence. I can see good arguments on both sides. I am only out for necessities and do wear a mask primarily out of respect for those with whom I am dealing, not because of any great confidence that the masks actually work.
One of the striking elements has been the course of the argument which apparently was paralleled in Ireland.
First, remember what the argument against masks was, back in the Spring:
Here in Ireland, HSE lead for infectious diseases Prof Martin Cormican recently reviewed guidelines on mask-wearing for hospital staff and came to the conclusion that there was no evidence to support the wearing of surgical masks by healthcare workers for close patient encounters and staff meetings.
Citing WHO advice, Prof Cormican suggested mask-wearing by people with no symptoms could create unnecessary cost and create “a false sense of security”.
A very similar argument was made here in the US at the beginning. It was a muddied message in that it seemed sometimes to be a simple "Masks don't work" argument and sometimes it was "Masks work but only for high exposure situations like hospitals so public, please don't hog the supplies" argument. We had this from WHO, CDC, and others.That’s the HSE lead for infectious diseases, warning that masks might actually be counter-productive, saying that wearing them could lead to people dropping their guard.
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