Mask-wearing students take to U-M campus starting this week
ANN ARBOR—Some students are wearing surgical masks on the University of Michigan campus and in the dormitories starting this week as the second year of the M-Flu study gets underway, now that the first confirmed flu case hit campus.
Students from four dormitories on the Ann Arbor campus volunteered to participate in the study, which looks at the efficacy and feasibility of hand washing and wearing masks to stop the spread of the flu over two flu seasons. The two-year study began last year and is funded by a $1.3 million grant from the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
Students in dormitories are the perfect study population because they eat, sleep and work in such close confines, said Allison Aiello, assistant professor in the U-M School of Public Health, and co-principal investigator on the study along with Dr. Arnold Monto, professor in the School of Public Health. The results will be used to help shape response policy in the case of a flu pandemic.
“If we know that people will wear their masks, and if we know that they will practice proper hand hygiene, then we know that a pandemic response policy that relies on masks and hand hygiene will be more effective,” Aiello said. “We need to have the information first though, in order to avoid response policies based on assumptions rather than rigorous research.”
Monto said: “We need to know which non-pharmaceutical interventions will work and which will not before we can know the best way to respond to a pandemic outbreak of influenza.”
Each house within participating residence halls will be randomly assigned to one of the three study arms: the face mask only group, the face mask and hand hygiene group, and the control group.
The study intervention will run through six weeks. Preliminary results from last year’s study are in and will be made public when the final leg of the study is completed to avoid influencing subjects’ behavior, Aiello said.
The study is a partnership between the U-M School of Public Health, University Housing, and the University Health Services.
The University of Michigan School of Public Health has been working to promote health and prevent disease since 1941, and is consistently ranked among the top five public health schools in the nation. Faculty and students in the school’s five academic departments and dozens of collaborative centers and initiatives are forging new solutions to the complex health challenges of today, including chronic disease, health care quality and finance, emerging genetic technologies, climate change, socioeconomic inequalities and their impact on health, infectious disease, and the globalization of health. Whether making new discoveries in the lab or researching and educating in the field, our faculty, students, and alumni are deployed around the globe to promote and protect our health.
For information on Aiello, visit: http://www.ns.umich.edu/htdocs/public/experts/ExpDisplay.php?ExpID=1071
For more on Monto, visit: http://www.ns.umich.edu/htdocs/public/experts/ExpDisplay.php?ExpID=545
For information on the study see: http://www.sph.umich.edu/mflu/
The University of Michigan School of Public Health has been working to promote health and prevent disease since 1941, and is consistently ranked among the top five public health schools in the nation. Faculty and students in the school’s five academic departments and dozens of collaborative centers and initiatives are forging new solutions to the complex health challenges of today, including chronic disease, health care quality and finance, emerging genetic technologies, climate change, socioeconomic inequalities and their impact on health, infectious disease, and the globalization of health. Whether making new discoveries in the lab or researching and educating in the field, our faculty, students, and alumni are deployed around the globe to promote and protect our health.
More information AielloMore on MontoInformation on the study