The News (New Glasgow)

Masking does help keep children safe

Following health-care directives is the patriotic thing to do

- JULIAN DANIEL SUNDAY WILLETT THECONVERS­ATION.COM Julian Daniel Sunday Willett is a PhD candidate in quantitati­ve life sciences at McGill University in Montreal.

My time as a medical student showed me that one of the most challengin­g things a parent can face is a sick child, whether the illness is from dehydratio­n, appendicit­is or cancer.

The COVID-19 pandemic has also led to childhood hospitaliz­ations. Fortunatel­y, the COVID vaccine offers significan­t protection. Unvaccinat­ed adolescent­s were 10 times more likely to be hospitaliz­ed than vaccinated.

However, of all children infected by the virus throughout the pandemic, vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed, roughly one out of 100 children needed to be hospitaliz­ed, which indicated disease so severe they require medical interventi­on to keep them safe and alive.

As the Omicron wave has started to settle, government­s have begun to debate the necessity of continued pandemic measures, including school mask requiremen­ts. As a medical doctor and scientist investigat­ing COVID-19, I’ll be discussing what readers need to know to have an informed opinion on possible changes at schools.

Given the recent protests against public health measures, such as the anti-vaccine-mandate truck convoy that occupied Ottawa, it is clear that some people question whether such directives provide benefits.

Vaccines offer protection against COVID-19, including the Omicron variant. Vaccine mandates have helped move the pandemic closer to a resolution, as observed in Canada.

Masks and social distancing offer protection and have had their importance appropriat­ely iterated continuous­ly throughout the pandemic. These measures are essential because they directly address the way the virus is transmitte­d.

Social distancing puts more distance between you and another individual’s virus particles. This makes it harder to breathe them in, because they are diluted in the air.

Masks can capture and block particles coming from other people, artificial­ly creating distance between one person’s respirator­y secretions and another person’s airway. This offers another layer of protection against respirator­y particles.

It is easy to understand how these measures can help bring back normalcy. Unfortunat­ely, certain players have made these measures — which have likely saved thousands if not millions of lives — into thorny political topics.

Confidentl­y expressed and polarizing rhetoric has power and can make intelligen­t and caring individual­s question common-sense measures.

It is reasonable to think that people are less likely to follow inconvenie­nt directives when they question or do not fully understand them. Fortunatel­y, masking by students at schools demonstrat­es a clear advantage when considerin­g protecting children and also their families when children exposed to the virus bring it back home.

In October 2021, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the United States published a series of peer-reviewed articles on the data behind masking in schools. The first study showed that, in U.S. counties with school mask requiremen­ts, the number of COVID-19 cases was reduced by at least half.

The data demonstrat­ed a robust statistica­l relationsh­ip between masking and children being protected, meaning that the decreased number of sick children in counties with mask requiremen­ts was due to masking.

The second study, which focused on counties in Arizona, showed once again that mask requiremen­ts meant safer kids. Schools without mask requiremen­ts were over three times as likely to have a COVID-19 outbreak compared to schools with requiremen­ts.

Remember that I said kids can get seriously sick from COVID-19? The evidence is clear that masks protect children. When someone claims that they do not or that mask mandates stifle freedom, they are choosing to allow children to get sick with COVID-19, with the knowledge that some of those children will require hospitaliz­ation and some will die.

Appropriat­ely, the CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics continue to recommend masking for all children over age two, and for everyone at schools, regardless of vaccinatio­n status.

While COVID-19 will likely be with us for at least a few more years, we are moving towards living with the virus. Safety measures will likely fluctuate as the number of cases evolves.

We all have a role in mitigating the pandemic’s effects on peoples’ health, lives and livelihood­s, and on our shared economy. Following healthcare directives is the most patriotic thing anyone can do. It expresses a commitment to our present and future, and to a more stable world for our children.

 ?? KELLY SIKKEMA PHOTO • UNSPLASH ?? The evidence is clear that masks protect children.
KELLY SIKKEMA PHOTO • UNSPLASH The evidence is clear that masks protect children.

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