- A survey of nearly 2,500 people found that men were less likely than women to wear
face masks . - It also found that men were less likely than women to believe they would be seriously affected by
COVID-19 . - The survey found men saw masks as "a sign of weakness" and "not cool."
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Men are far more vulnerable to the novel
According to the survey of 2,459 people, men
"Men more than women agree that wearing a face covering is shameful, not cool, a sign of weakness, and a stigma," the study authors wrote. The New York Post first reported the story, noting that other surveys had uncovered similar results about men's reluctance to wear masks.
But all of those gender differences went away in counties where mask-wearing was mandatory, evidence that making mask-wearing could have a greater effect on men than women.
The study, based on members of Amazon Mechanical Turk, an online crowdsourcing marketplace, also found that men were less likely to believe they would be seriously affected by the new coronavirus, even though research has shown that men may be more at risk of getting infected.
The study authors noted that while the study was representative of people in an urban environment, some groups were slightly overrepresented: men, white people, and people aged between 25 and 54.
Previous research found that women are more likely to wear face masks as a precaution. During the SARS outbreak, researchers found women were more likely to don face masks. Researchers also found that women were more likely to wear face masks during the 2009 H1N1 epidemic and while going out and experiencing symptoms of influenza.
"Age and gender play an important role in determining whether someone will comply with wearing a mask," authors of a 2013 analysis on mask-wearing wrote.
Some of America's most prominent male leaders are not wearing masks
When Arizona Republic reporter BrieAnna Frank showed up to visit an Arizona Honeywell plant that had pivoted to mask-manufacturing, she wore a mask, while Trump, who was visiting in a presidential capacity, did not. She tweeted that she was harassed for wearing a mask, and that one man told her "it's submission, it's muzzling yourself, it looks weak — especially for men."
Vice president Mike Pence was widely criticized for not wearing a mask during a visit to the Mayo Clinic. Pence later apologized, telling Fox
Colombia, Cuba, Austria, and Morocco are among the over 75 countries that mandate that residents wear masks.
In America, the