Omicron spawns U.S. search for better kids' masks, new standard
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[April 09, 2022]
By Lisa Baertlein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The fast-spreading Omicron variant stoked U.S.
interest in better masks for children to ward off COVID-19, and that is
adding fuel to an effort that could set the stage for domestic oversight
of their quality.
Adult N95 masks are federally regulated and considered a gold standard.
They were among the "better masks" U.S. health officials recommended in
January to protect against Omicron. For children, no comparable
U.S.-regulated mask exists, and some concerned parents turned to
kid-sized masks made to South Korea's KF94 or China's KN95 standards
instead.
While many U.S. states and schools have since stopped requiring
mask-wearing for COVID, disease experts say children will still need
high-quality masks for everything from current and future pandemics to
seasonal flu and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) that can cause
serious illness and death.
"Every year there are opportunities for masks to make a difference -
whether it's in the classroom or in the daycare," said Dr. Steven Krug,
an emergency room physician and chair of the American Academy of
Pediatrics' Council on Children and Disasters.
U.S. e-commerce sites are crowded with sellers offering children's KF94
or KN95 masks. Most sites do not authenticate those products, and U.S.
health agencies do not approve them -
creating fertile ground for fraudsters.
Dr. Jennifer Nayak, a University of Rochester Medical Center infectious
disease specialist, told Reuters that mask shopping for her three kids
on Amazon.com and other sites spurred questions, including: "Is it real
vs. counterfeit? Is it going to fit?"
South Korea is considered a leader for children's masks because it
tightly enforces its KF94 standard. Its health ministry says the only
genuine KF94s are made in South Korea.
Behealthyusa.net, the direct seller of made-in-South Korea BOTN KF94s in
the United States, told Reuters its site sold out of many small-sized
KF94 masks during the original Omicron surge.
Los Angeles-based importer Tony Chen, father of 8- and 11-year-olds,
started bringing in kid-sized, made-in-South Korea KF94 masks when
parents struggled to find authentic masks at affordable prices.
Parents with ties to South Korea pointed Chen to reputable children's
KF94 mask sellers there, he said. He flies masks duty-free to the United
States under direct-to-consumer shipping rules that lower his cost to 47
cents to $1 each, vs. $1 to $3 on e-commerce sites.
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"I'm just hoping I break even," said
Chen, who has imported about 9,000 children's KF94s for dozens of
families since Jan. 1 and plans to keep going as long as needed.
A handful of other groups also are doing leg work for parents.
Project N95 - which vets mask sellers all the way back to the
factory - runs a website that offers a variety of masks for children
- including KF94s from South Korea, KN95s from China, and specialty
products made by legitimate N95 manufacturers in the United States.
"We do often run out," Project N95 Executive Director Anne Miller
said.
Factories produce fewer masks for children than adults, and demand
for children's sizes is increasing up to 15% per week, Miller said.
LONG ROAD TO OVERSIGHT
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) certifies N95
masks and inspects the facilities that make them. A move is afoot to
establish a U.S. standard for high-filtration children's masks,
which could set the stage for domestic oversight.
Texas mask-maker Aegle and the University of Maryland's Fischell
Institute for Biomedical Devices are designing children's masks that
filter like N95s but are optimized for kids' smaller faces and
lungs. Aegle Chief Executive Andy Moy aims to start clinical trials
at Washington's Children's National Hospital in April.
The standard would define mask materials, measurements and
filtration qualities. After that, a standards body or government
agency would need to support and adopt it. A federal agency would be
needed to enforce the standard, Moy said.
"Only then will parents have the assurance they need," Moy said.
American Mask Manufacturer's Association (AMMA) founder Lloyd
Armbrust said success would require ongoing commitment and political
pressure.
"These problems are totally solvable, but people have to care long
enough," Armbrust said.
(This story corrects China's mask standard in paragraph 2)
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein; Additional reporting by Joyce Lee in
Seoul; Editing by Richard Chang)
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