Everybody, it seems, is wearing them.
On trains, on the street, at parties. It is impossible to go anywhere in Japan this time of year and not notice — the Japanese love surgical masks and wear them just about everywhere they go.
This year’s craze: the N95 model by 3M, a thick and nearly impregnable face mask with a noticeable nose groove and extra breathing space. The heavier-than-normal mask runs up to about ¥3,000 (US$30) at stores.
There are other specialty types. Masks made for people with glasses. Masks designed not to smudge makeup. Kids’ masks, with colorful cartoon characters such as Hello Kitty or Mickey Mouse. Models even advertise them in TV commercials — in one, a tall woman walks gracefully through the city, her bright mask shining at night.
Japan in the spring gets a double whammy of influenza germs and cedar pollen — leading to runny noses, watery eyes and coughing. The masks are primarily to protect against the pollen. But, perhaps even more importantly, they are a show of consideration for others by demonstrating that, if you are ill in public, at least you are trying to keep your germs to yourself.
“Japan is fastidious to the point of being obsessive,” said Kyle Cleveland, a cultural sociologist who teaches at Temple University in Tokyo. “People are willing to acknowledge and recognize the value of not making their co-workers or classmates sick.”
Not all agree masks do that, particularly regarding the flu.
Tom Lomax, a British surgeon at the Tokyo Medical and Surgical Clinic, does not recommend masks to his patients, who are mostly Western. He said the value of such a prevention strategy is difficult to measure because most information comes from companies that are marketing the product.
“Rather than being based on any hard scientific evidence, it’s passed into the culture,” Lomax said. “I think it reflects people’s awareness that they’re part of a group.”
For pollen, however, the masks are a buffer against what all agree is a major problem.
More than 25 million Japanese people — about one in five — suffer from pollen allergies, which became a national cause for concern after World War II, when the government subsidized the costs of planting scores of cedar trees in mountainous areas.
After the trees matured, the wind began spreading storms of pollen throughout the country, especially affecting cities.
Health companies have spun the hay fever problem into gold. Sales for both long-lasting and disposable masks have sharply risen in the past three years, showing that they continue to be an ubiquitous, recession-proof commodity.
The mask market was worth ¥12.9 billion in 2007, and ¥11 billion the year before, data from the Yano Research Institute, a marketing research firm, showed. Sales for the 2008 fiscal year — which ended on March 31 — are expected to top ¥14 billion.
Unicharm, one of Japan’s biggest makers of masks and other health care products, has reported recent strong growth in mask sales.
“We have responded to a heightened sense that one should take responsibility for ‘self-care,’ to protect one’s own health,” Unicharm said in its earnings report for April-December of last year.
But some wearers say that, more than a health issue, they wear the masks almost as a fashion statement. By wearing a mask, the thinking goes, you are showing that you are being socially responsible.
“It comes from kindness, thoughtfulness — Japanese characteristics,” said mask-wearing Shuichi Yamamoto, a surveyor, who was standing near one of Japan’s busiest intersections on his way home recently. “Wearing a mask is socially constructive. If I get a cough, I should have to wear a mask because everyone should think of others.”
Yoko Tamura, who wears the newer “super dimensional” model that fits snugly around her cheeks and nose, said she dons it even at home so she doesn’t spread any germs to her son, who is studying for the college entrance exams.
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