Lodi News-Sentinel

Personal responsibi­lity matters in COVID fight — so does good public health info

- Cynthia M. Allen is a columnist for the Fort Worth StarTelegr­am. Readers may send her email at cmallen@startelegr­am.com. CYNTHIA M. ALLEN

Last Thursday, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott issued a new executive order that will make it harder for local officials to require face coverings, including in schools, and forbids the state from mandating vaccines.

“Today’s executive order will provide clarity and uniformity in the Lone Star State’s continued fight against COVID-19,” said Abbott in an accompanyi­ng statement. “The new Executive Order emphasizes that the path forward relies on personal responsibi­lity rather than government mandates.”

Whether you agree with the directive or believe, in light of new masking guidance from the CDC and vaccine mandates for federal employees, that to limit government authority during a pandemic is a fool’s errand, you have to give Abbott credit for his consistenc­y and simplicity in messaging: Personal responsibi­lity > government mandates.

That’s certainly more than can be said for many public health authoritie­s, who have muddled and undermined their own recommenda­tions with remarkable frequency throughout the pandemic.

The about-face on masks is yet another example.

After months of reassuring Americans that being fully vaccinated neutralize­d their ability to spread COVID-19, and weeks after issuing guidance that vaccinated individual­s no longer needed to wear masks, the CDC is now recommendi­ng that even vaccinated people should again be masking indoors.

The reason, according to CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, is that “in rare occasions, some vaccinated people infected with the delta variant after vaccinatio­n may be contagious and pass the virus to others.”

It’s understand­able that public health guidance is subject to change as new research emerges; that’s a given.

But the explanatio­n was initially offered without supporting data. An internal CDC document upon which the recommenda­tion was apparently made has since shed some light on the decision, but the data contained therein has drawn criticism for its accuracy.

Of course, we know from experience that data (let alone good data) isn’t always the driving force behind public health recommenda­tions.

That certainly appears to be the case when it comes to the CDC’s other recent recommenda­tion that students as well as all teachers and staff mask during the school year, regardless of vaccinatio­n status.

This recommenda­tion comes even though we know from experience (and voluminous research) that COVID-19 is less deadly to children than other common illnesses like the flu.

This is true even for the delta variant.

It is harder for children to get COVID-19 and harder for them to spread it.

And there are legitimate reasons to worry that the masks we make children wear have potentiall­y serious negative consequenc­es, both physical and developmen­tal.

What’s more is that it is becoming increasing­ly clear that the virus surges and declines in ways that human behavior cannot seem to control or explain.

The uptick in cases, courtesy of the delta variant, is real and concerning.

But even The New York Times, which has not always regarded public health recommenda­tions uncritical­ly, acknowledg­es that the delta outbreaks in both India and the U.K. rose and then plunged without any clear behavioral explanatio­n.

Much to our collective chagrin, human efforts to contain the virus — masking, distancing, shutdowns and even vaccines (if Walensky is correct) — appear to have some control over viral spread, but to a far more limited effect than we like to admit.

That takes us back to Gov. Abbott and his message of personal responsibi­lity.

While that message doesn’t resonate with everyone — particular­ly when it’s easier to blame unfortunat­e circumstan­ces on the behaviors of everyone else — it’s starting to have the ring of truth.

But to behave responsibl­y, people need to have good informatio­n from sources they can trust, who acknowledg­e both what they know and what they don’t.

I certainly hope Texans will behave responsibl­y. When are they going to have the informatio­n necessary to do so?

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