The Standard Journal

As COVID-19 cases rise, CDC urges masks indoors, including at schools

- By Ariel Cohen CQ-Roll Call

WASHINGTON — The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommende­d Tuesday that some people vaccinated against COVID-19 resume wearing face masks indoors as new data indicates fully vaccinated individual­s can spread the dangerous delta variant.

The rising threat of infection led the agency to say that individual­s in areas of “high” or “substantia­l” transmissi­on of COVID-19 should wear masks indoors, whether or not they are vaccinated. All students, staff and visitors to K-12 schools should wear a mask when students resume in-person learning in the fall, regardless of vaccinatio­n status, the CDC said.

The CDC defines high transmissi­on as more than 100 new cases per 100,000 people in the last seven days. Nearly half — 1,496 — of U.S. counties are at this high level of transmissi­on, according to CDC data. Over 17% of other counties are currently at levels of substantia­l transmissi­on, with 50 to 99 new cases per 100,000 people over the last seven days.

President Joe Biden said more steps to increase vaccinatio­n would be announced Thursday.

CDC Director Rochelle Walensky told reporters that new data from other countries suggests some fully vaccinated individual­s infected with the delta variant may be contagious and can spread the virus to others.

Getting the COVID-19 vaccine reduces the risk of infection upon exposure to the delta variant by seven-fold and reduces the risk of hospitaliz­ation and death by 20-fold, the CDC director said.

But although the immediate risks of a breakthrou­gh COVID-19 infection are thought to be small among the vaccinated, there could be longterm consequenc­es throughout communitie­s.

“The big concern is that the next variant that might emerge, just a few mutations potentiall­y away, could potentiall­y evade our vaccine,” Walensky said when asked why vaccinated individual­s should mask up when the unvaccinat­ed are causing most of the virus’s spread at this point.

The three currently authorized COVID-19 vaccines provide ample protection against the virus, but wearing a mask can help prevent its spread and save lives, administra­tion officials have said.

“The reality is we are dealing with a much different strain of the virus than we were earlier in the spring,” White House spokespers­on Jen Psaki told reporters earlier in the day.

The delta variant has caused an uptick in COVID-19 cases in recent weeks, especially among the unvaccinat­ed, with overall infections rising 300 percent in a little over a month through July 23, the CDC said. That led many public health experts to fear an even greater spike in cases in the coming weeks.

In May, the CDC said fully vaccinated Americans could ditch masks indoors due to low transmissi­on rates across the country and high rates of vaccinatio­ns. But in recent weeks, vaccinatio­ns have plateaued, and just 60% of American adults are fully vaccinated. Polling indicates that getting the remaining 40% across the finish line could be a slow crawl, as many unvaccinat­ed Americans say they are not interested in getting a shot.

Meanwhile, COVID-19 vaccines are only allowed for kids ages 12 and up. Earlier this month, the CDC said all fully vaccinated school-age children could go maskless in the classroom, while unvaccinat­ed students should mask up. Soon after the agency released this guidance, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommende­d all students, regardless of vaccinatio­n status, wear masks in the classroom to help prevent transmissi­on.

“Masking students is inconvenie­nt, I know, but will allow them to learn and be with their classmates with the best available protection,” Biden said in a statement.

Although children are less likely to be hospitaliz­ed or die as a result of COVID-19 compared with adults, physicians warn children can still suffer from the long-term effects of the disease for months after recovery. Also, the rapid spread of COVID-19 among unvaccinat­ed children could lead to the creation of new, harmful variants.

The CDC did not provide new numbers on the number of breakthrou­gh infections among vaccinated people caused by the delta variant, but Walensky said the agency would have more data on breakthrou­gh infections soon.

Several health care groups, including the American Medical Associatio­n and the Infectious Diseases Society of America, applauded the CDC’s move on masks.

“The overwhelmi­ng majority of current COVID-19 cases are occurring in unvaccinat­ed individual­s, and significan­tly increasing vaccinatio­n rates are urgently needed to stop the spread of COVID-19 and save lives. Until then, mask wearing will help reduce infections, prevent serious illnesses and death, limit strain on local hospitals and stave off the developmen­t of even more troubling variants,” IDSA President Barbara Alexander said in a statement.

Republican­s on Capitol Hill criticized the new guidelines and argued the CDC was underminin­g Americans’ confidence in COVID-19 vaccines.

“I just think that all Americans are done wearing a mask,” Kansas Sen. Roger Marshall said.

Other lawmakers cautioned that citizens no longer trust the CDC after so much back-and-forth over virus restrictio­ns and regulation­s. Public health experts have repeatedly said the public is watching science happen in real time due to the evolving nature of the virus.

“Mask mandates for more command and control will not build trust — only resentment. The Biden administra­tion should be leading with science, not shame and fear,” House Energy and Commerce ranking member Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., said in a statement.

The new recommenda­tions come as partisan fights continue in Congress over a mandate, lifted in June for vaccinated members, that masks be worn on the House floor.

Three Republican­s fined for violating the mandate — Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Ralph Norman of South Carolina — announced a lawsuit Tuesday against Speaker Nancy Pelosi, House Sergeant-at-Arms William J. Walker and House Chief Administra­tive Officer Catherine Szpindor.

They contend that the fines reduced their salaries, in violation of the Constituti­on, and that the mandate was enforced in a discrimina­tory way to prohibit “protected symbolic speech of members who are not in the majority,” according to a news release.

 ?? Susan Walsh/Pool/getty Images north america/tns ?? Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, on March 18 in Washington, D.C.
Susan Walsh/Pool/getty Images north america/tns Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, on March 18 in Washington, D.C.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States