Face Masks have a Negligible Negative Effect on CO2 and O2 Levels

A new study suggests that face masks have a negligible negative effect on carbon dioxide and oxygen levels that a person breathes.

It is time to clear up some of the misinformation we have been hearing about the "evils" of wearing a face mask to protect against the spread of the COVID-19 virus. Face masks DO NOT cause a CO2 problem for people who wear them. 

 A research project published in the journal Annals of the American Thoracic Society contributes to dispelling the myths surrounding the use of face masks in the context of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

We are continually increasing our knowledge about SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, scientists have become increasingly convinced that masks can help reduce its spread. Masks can protect you, your family, and your community.

We are now sure that the primary way that SARS-CoV-2 is transmitted between people involves viral particles entering a person's respiratory tract. Transmission typically happens after another person coughs, sneezes, or speaks near them, producing droplets or aerosols that transport the virus.

Face masks play an important role in reducing exposure to the virus and limiting how much virus a person can project toward other people.

There is a growing consensus about the value of face masks in reducing the spread of SARS-CoV-2. This has not always been the case.

Initially, little was known about the new virus, and policy had to be developed based on the best available evidence, following scientific models that drew on data from earlier epidemics involving similar viruses.

Consequently, guidance about mask-wearing has varied from country to country, and some major health bodies, including the World Health Organization (WHO), have changed their advice over time.

In many ways, these changes and discrepancies are inevitable when providing advice about an urgent public health crisis while scientists are continually discovering new information. Dogmatically sticking to a position despite the changing evidence or offering advice when there is little evidence to justify it are unlikely to be better approaches.

However, as research develops, we need to be responsive to the best thoughts and findings as it unfolds. The problem is that research has shown that significant changes in official guidance reduce people's trust in the science that is based on the policy.

Sadly, the use of face masks has become a political battleground. There are vocal proponents on the right denouncing enforced mask-wearing, either as an infringement of freedom or a suspected element in a broad conspiracy that COVID-19 was mobilized or fabricated.

In this context, some people have proposed that face masks threaten public health, supposing that the masks reduce the amount of inhaled oxygen. But science has come to the rescue.  

To test this theory that masks are a threat to public health, the researchers behind a small study recruited 15 house staff physicians, who had no health issues affecting their lungs, and 15 veterans with COPD.

The veterans were in the hospital so that doctors could check their oxygen levels as part of their regular COPD monitoring.

The monitoring involved, among other things, blood oxygen levels checked with a blood test before and after a 6-minute walking exercise. This exercise was done while wearing a mask, as per hospital protocol during a pandemic.

The researchers found no clinically significant changes in any of the participants' end tidal carbon dioxide measurements — the amount of carbon dioxide in an exhalation. They also found no changes in blood oxygen levels after 5 or 30 minutes of wearing a mask while resting.

As expected, the participants with COPD had lower blood oxygen levels than those without respiratory disease. No participant with COPD had any significant changes in their gas exchanges due to wearing a mask.

In the words of senior study author Dr. Michael Campos, of the Miami Veterans Administration Medical Center and the University of Miami's Miller School of Medicine, "We show that the effects are minimal at most, even in people with very severe lung impairment."

If a person experiences shortness of breath while wearing a mask, the study suggests that this does not result from reduced oxygen levels or increased carbon dioxide levels.

Dr. Campos explains, "Dyspnea, the feeling of shortness of breath felt with masks by some, is not synonymous [with] alterations in gas exchange. It likely occurs from the restriction of airflow with the mask in particular when higher ventilation is needed on exertion."

While recognizing that masks may be uncomfortable for some, the authors clarify that wearing a mask is critical in maintaining the wearer's health and those around them. They write:

"It is important to inform the public that the discomfort associated with mask use should not lead to unsubstantiated safety concerns, as this may attenuate the application of a practice proven to improve public health."

Though the study was small, its findings emphasize that wearing a mask is still important — given the mounting evidence that masks reduce viral transmission and the lack of any evidence to the contrary."

As Dr. Campos summarizes, "The public should not believe that masks kill."