Protective masks have
suddenly become an integral part of our daily wardrobe. In turn, we’ve been
wondering about what the best methods for cleaning them are. Can you just throw
them in the washer and dryer like a pair of socks, or do they need to be cared
for like a more delicate item? What water temperature will actually get the
mask clean? After all, if you’re wearing a mask every
day to prevent the spread and contraction of the virus, you want it to be
sanitary. Not to mention that as the temperatures rise and we all get sweatier,
the scourge of clogged pores and “maskne” (mask-induced chin and cheek
breakouts) is ever nigh. So to find out how to keep our masks in their best,
cleanest form, we reached out to three doctors to hear their thoughts. Below,
their tips for washing masks —
and the products they recommend you keep on hand for cleaning.
Cleaning
your mask
First things first:
All of the doctors we spoke to agreed that you should wash your mask daily. “We
recommend cleaning the mask at least once a day,” says Dr. Lindsey Gottlieb, director of infection
prevention at Mount Sinai Morningside. “A reason for cleaning it more than that
would be if it got really wet or dirty before the end of the day — for instance
if you sneeze into it and it gets visibly wet, or if for some reason you walk
by something that sprays on the outside of it, then I would clean it sooner.
Otherwise, daily should suffice.” Dr. Elizabeth Mullans, a dermatologist at
Uptown Dermatology in Houston, agrees: “If someone runs a quick errand, then
goes home and doesn’t go out again, I recommend they wash the mask when they
get home,” she says. “If you’re doing multiple errands at one time, then I
wouldn’t wear different masks into each store, just wash it when you are done
with errands for the day.” Gottlieb suggests having a few cotton masks on hand
at home so that if you forgot to wash your mask at the end of the day (or
simply don’t feel like it) you’ll have a clean one ready to go.
There are precautions
to follow when removing the mask, too. As Janet Haas, the director of epidemiology at
Lenox Hill Hospital, told us, after wearing the mask outside, “the fabric of
the mask should be considered contaminated, and you should avoid touching it —
when removing the mask, handle it by the straps or ear loops, and wash your
hands for 20 seconds with soap and water, or use sanitizer after handling the
used mask.”
“Washing a mask by
hand or with a machine are both fine,” says Gottlieb. “Something to remember
about this coronavirus is that it’s killed pretty easily by most detergents, so the most important thing is
just doing the cleaning — the exact approach
isn’t as important.” Gottlieb says that if you’re washing the mask in a washing
machine, any standard detergent is fine. “You don’t need to buy one that
has any particular
claims — anything like Tide that’s sold at your local drugstore should do the
trick,” she says. Whether you’re washing by hand or in a machine, she suggests
using warm to hot water, noting that “the hotter the water, the better it is at
killing organisms like this virus.”
When it comes time to
dry the mask, the doctors we spoke to said that you can either put it in the
dryer on a high heat setting, or leave it out to dry on your regular
clothes-drying rack. “If you happen to have a window with some nice sunlight,
you could always put it by the window to get that little bit of sun, as well,”
says Gottlieb. “Though, I can’t say that I’ve seen any data suggesting that
putting it in the sun makes a difference [in killing germs].” How you dry the
mask is less urgent of a concern than making sure it’s clean in the first
place. As Gottlieb says, “The most important thing is just getting it in soap
or bleach and getting it clean.”
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