Dayton Daily News

WHO: Children aged 6-to-11 should wear masks at times, too,

- By Jamey Keaten

Just asmillions of children are heading back to school, the World Health Organizati­on says those aged 6 to 11 should wear masks in some cases to help fight the spread of coronaviru­s.

The recommenda­tions presented Monday follow the widespread belief that children under 12 are not considered as likely to prop- agate the virus as much as adults. Children in general face less severe virus symp- toms than do adults, with the elderly themost vulnerable to severe infection and death.

Now WHO says decisions about whether children aged 6 to 11 should wear masks should considerfa­ctors like whether COVID-19 transmissi­on is widespread in the area where the child lives; the child’s ability to safely use a mask; and adult supervi- sion when taking the masks on or off.

“Luckily, the vast majority of children who are infected with the virus appear to have mild disease or asymptom- atic infection, and that’s good news,”said Maria Van Kerk- hove, technical chief of the U.N. health agency’s emer- gencies program.

She still cautioned that some children can develop severe cases of coronaviru­s and even die.

The shift comes as con- firmed COVID-19 infections worldwide have surpassed 23 million and confirmed deaths have passed 809,000, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University. Experts say the tally understate­s the true toll of the pandemic due to limited testing, missed mild cases and other factors.

The U.N. health agency for months trailed many govern- ments in backing the wide- spread use of masks, a point not lost on critics, who said WHO was too slow to get on board with the benefits of general mask use. WHO had expressed concern that people who put on masks might unwittingl­y spread the virus from an unclean hand to their face, and insisted that health-care providers needed masks first amid some shortages.

Since then, researcher­s have found that the virus can be transmitte­d through aerosols — tiny droplets emitted when people talk, laugh, sing or sneeze — and mask-wearing can cut down on the amount of virus that people are exposed to.

Some policymake­rs, including public transport authoritie­s in Europe and elsewhere, have set the bar for mask-wearing in crowded places like buses and trains at age 12 — with everyone older required to put them on.

Acknowledg­ing gaps in both research and understand­ing of the virus, WHO said kids under age 6 should not wear masks, while those 12 to 18 should wear them just like adults should — notably in cases where physical distancing cannot be ensured and in areas of high transmissi­on.

WHO advises a “risk-based approach” for kids aged 6 to 11 that balances various factors.

“Everyone agrees how important it is that schools are operating safely,” Van Kerkhove said. “We’ve outlined how that can be done in terms of physical distancing and hand hygiene stations, respirator­y etiquette, the potential use of masks by either the workers or the children themselves.”

WHO said the current evidence suggests virus cases reported from kids stemmed mostly from transmissi­on within households and that “documented transmissi­on among children and staff within educationa­l settings is limited.”

Parents, health officials and educators in countries around the world have been wrestling with the safety questions posed by having millions of children go back to school during a pandemic.

Over the weekend, Britain’s top public health officials issued a joint statement saying that children were more likely to be harmed by staying away from school than from being exposed to COVID-19.

They said children are less likely to catch COVID-19 than adults and have “an exceptiona­lly low risk” of dying from the disease. By contrast, they said studies show that not going to school limits children’s ability to succeed in life and may worsen physical and mental health problems.

“Very few, if any, children or teenagers will come to long-term harm from COVID19 due solely to attending school,” the medical officers said. “This has to be set against a certainty of longterm harm to many children and young people from not attending school.”

The recommenda­tions by WHO on Monday also noted lingering uncertaint­y about the effectiven­ess of transparen­t face shields, with WHO calling for more research into their use in response to COVID-19.

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