The Government on Wednesday
published the evidence informing its recent
controversial decision to recommend all secondary school pupils wear face masks in classrooms.
The new
document from the Department for Education (DfE) explains that the decision "has been taken on the recommendation of UKHSA and is based on a range of evidence". It says the Government has "balanced education and public health considerations, including the benefits in managing infection and transmission, against any educational and wider health and wellbeing impacts from the recommended use of face coverings".
While conceding that the "direct COVID-19 health risks to children and young people are very low" - and rejecting SAGE's advice to recommend masks in primary school classrooms (yes, really) - it claims that "the balance of risks for secondary classrooms has changed at this point in time, in accordance with the evolving evidence and the phase of the pandemic".
The document summarises its evidence as follows:
Face coverings can be effective in contributing to reducing transmission of COVID-19 in public and community settings. This is informed by a range of research, including randomised control trials, contact tracing studies, and observational studies - assessed most recently by UKHSA, described in a review conducted in November 2021. The review's conclusions were broadly in line with those of a previous Public Health England review; however, the addition of randomised control trials and substantially more individual-level observational studies increases the strength of the conclusions and strengthens the evidence for the effectiveness of face coverings in reducing the spread of COVID-19 in the community, through source control, wearer protection, and universal masking.
Comment: It's yet another testament to how effective the propaganda is (and also how partisan that propaganda is).
See also: