Chicago Sun-Times

Mask mandates, dining out influence virus spread: study

- BY MIKE STOBBE

NEW YORK — A new national study adds strong evidence that mask mandates can slow the spread of the coronaviru­s and that allowing dining at restaurant­s can increase cases and deaths.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released the study Friday.

“All of this is very consistent,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said during a White House briefing on Friday. “You have decreases in cases and deaths when you wear masks, and you have increases in cases and deaths when you have in-person restaurant dining.”

The study was released just as some states are rescinding mask mandates and restaurant limits. Earlier this week, Texas became the biggest state to lift its mask rule, joining a movement by many governors to loosen COVID-19 restrictio­ns despite pleas from health officials.

The CDC researcher­s looked at U.S. counties placed under state-issued mask mandates and at counties that allowed restaurant dining — both indoors and at tables outside. The study looked at data from March through December of last year.

The scientists found that mask mandates were associated with reduced coronaviru­s transmissi­on, and that improvemen­ts in new cases and deaths increased as time went on.

Reopening restaurant dining was not followed by a significan­t increase in cases and deaths in the first 40 days after restrictio­ns were lifted. But after that, there were increases of about 1 percentage point in the growth rate of cases and — later — 2 to 3 percentage points in the growth rate of deaths.

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