Fact Check: Disposable masks should always be worn colored-side-out
fact-checking

Fact check: Disposable masks should always be worn colored-side-out

Devon Link
USA TODAY

The claim: Disposable masks should be worn white-side-out to keep COVID-19 out

As total U.S. COVID-19 cases exceed 600,000 and deaths surpass 25,000, mask use is becoming increasingly common. On April 3,  the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reversed its stance to recommend voluntary use of face masks in public. And some state and local governments are requiring masks or cloth face coverings while out in public in certain circumstances.

Amid the many conversations about face masks, misinformation about proper use continues to spread. The claim that disposable masks should be reversed depending on the health of the wearer persists despite fact checks finding otherwise.

On March 15, a Facebook user posted an image of a sign depicting a common disposable mask and instructed people to wear masks with the “White side out: Filter- When (you’re) not sick and want to keep virus out” and “Blue side out: to keep germs in when (you’re) sick.”

The user told USA TODAY that the sign had been posted in her doctor's office. When she learned this was inaccurate, the Facebook user removed the post, which had nearly 10,000 shares. Her post was not unique. Similar posts making the same claim have been appearing on social media since January.

Medical experts say masks should always be worn colored-side-out

In the World Health Organizations instructional video “When and how to wear medical masks to protect against coronavirus,” Dr. April Baller explains the inside of the mask “is usually the white side.”

“The colored side of the mask is usually the front and should face away from you, while the white side touches your face,” the San Francisco Department of Public Health explains on its website.

Dr. Wing Hong Seto, the co-director of the WHO Collaborating Center for Infectious Disease Epidemiology and Control, addressed the claim directly to QuickTake by Bloomberg on Jan. 24.

“You see it has the blue color on the outside because it is waterproof and then you have white on the inside because it is absorbent,” he said. “So, if I cough, it absorbs it."

Seto also stressed the importance of wearing a face mask with the metal wired edge on top and disposing of used masks without touching the outside.

Disposable masks’ fluid-resistant layer should face outward

PriMed, a leading medical mask producer, explains the importance of proper mask usage on its website. Medical masks are made to be fluid resistant, with the waterproof layer on the outside to “minimize the amount of fluid that could transfer from the outer layers through to the inner layers as the result of a splash or spray,” in accordance with the American Society of Testing and Materials standards.

“The filtration efficiency and protective ability of a medical face mask is compromised when the mask becomes wet, torn or dislodged,” PriMed states.

Fact-checkers debunk the mask reversal claim

Several fact-checkers have debunked the claim, clarifying that disposable medical masks should always be worn with the white, absorbent layer facing inward.

Verafiles, a Filipino verified signatory of the International Fact-Checking Network Code of Principles, was one of the first to address the claim in January after the vice mayor of Manila, Sheilah “Honey” Lacuna-Pangan, incorrectly demonstrated how to wear a surgical mask.

The Manila Public Information Office then published a video of Lacuna-Pangan’s incorrect demonstration on its Facebook page. The original video has since been taken down, but copies are still available on YouTube.

The claim was also addressed by PolitiFact in February and the Associated Press in March.

Our ruling: False

We rate the claim that infected people should wear reversed disposable medical masks to prevent spreading COVID-19 as FALSE because it is not supported by our research. Medical experts and a manufacturer say disposable face masks should always be worn with the wired edge upward and colored side outward. Mask users should carefully dispose of such masks after each use and practice good hygiene to properly prevent the spread of COVID-19. (For information on use of cloth face coverings, here's some tips from the CDC.)

Our fact-check sources:

Handing out surgical masks.
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