Universal Masking is Urgent in the COVID-19 Pandemic: SEIR and Agent Based Models, Empirical Validation, Policy Recommendations
De Kai, Guy-Philippe Goldstein, Alexey Morgunov, Vishal Nangalia, Anna, Rotkirch

TL;DR
This study uses SEIR and agent-based models, validated with empirical data, to demonstrate that early, widespread mask-wearing significantly reduces COVID-19 spread, supporting urgent policy implementation.
Contribution
The paper introduces combined theoretical models and empirical validation showing the critical impact of early, universal mask adoption on controlling COVID-19.
Findings
Universal masking with at least 80% coverage significantly reduces virus spread.
Early adoption of masks (by Day 50) is more effective than late implementation.
Empirical data strongly correlates early universal masking with successful case growth suppression.
Abstract
We present two models for the COVID-19 pandemic predicting the impact of universal face mask wearing upon the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus--one employing a stochastic dynamic network based compartmental SEIR (susceptible-exposed-infectious-recovered) approach, and the other employing individual ABM (agent-based modelling) Monte Carlo simulation--indicating (1) significant impact under (near) universal masking when at least 80% of a population is wearing masks, versus minimal impact when only 50% or less of the population is wearing masks, and (2) significant impact when universal masking is adopted early, by Day 50 of a regional outbreak, versus minimal impact when universal masking is adopted late. These effects hold even at the lower filtering rates of homemade masks. To validate these theoretical models, we compare their predictions against a new empirical data set we have…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfection Control and Ventilation · COVID-19 epidemiological studies · COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts
