Abstract

The widespread use of facemasks throughout the population is recommended by the WHO to reduce transmission of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. As some regions of the world are facing mask shortages, reuse may be necessary. However, used masks are considered as a potential hazard that may spread and transmit disease if they are not decontaminated correctly and systematically before reuse. As a result, the inappropriate decontamination practices that are commonly witnessed in the general public are challenging management of the epidemic at a large scale. To achieve public acceptance and implementation, decontamination procedures need to be low-cost and simple. We propose the use of hot hygroscopic materials to decontaminate non-medical facemasks in household settings. We report on the inactivation of a viral load on a facial mask exposed to hot hygroscopic materials for 15 minutes. As opposed to recent academic studies whereby decontamination is achieved by maintaining heat and humidity above a given value, a more flexible procedure is proposed here using a slow decaying pattern, which is both effective and easier to implement, suggesting straightforward public deployment and hence reliable implementation by the population.

Highlights

  • Facemasks are being widely used amidst the global COVID-19 pandemic to reduce airborne virus transmission in the context of social interactions [1]

  • The recommended household decontamination procedures are time- and energy-intensive [7], which can potentially lead to low public acceptance, and result in some cases in infrequent or slapdash decontamination practices

  • An easy, lowcost, and quick decontamination procedure is required to increase the daily usage of facemask decontamination

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Summary

Introduction

Facemasks are being widely used amidst the global COVID-19 pandemic to reduce airborne virus transmission in the context of social interactions [1]. Since SARS-CoV-2 can remain on the mask’s surface for a long time (up to seven days on surgical masks [8] (chin AWH, Chu JTS, et al lancet microbe, 2020)), the mask itself can become a vector of contamination if it is not systematically decontaminated, thereby sustaining the spread of the epidemic. To contain this issue, an easy, lowcost, and quick decontamination procedure is required to increase the daily usage of facemask decontamination

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