Las Vegas Review-Journal

CDC: Campers can skip masks

Fully vaccinated kids need not wear them indoors or outside

- By Mike Stobbe

Kids at summer camps can skip wearing masks outdoors, with some exceptions, federal health officials said Friday.

Children who aren’t fully vaccinated should still wear masks outside when they’re in crowds or in sustained close contact with others — and when they are inside, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. Fully vaccinated kids need not wear masks indoors or outside, the agency said.

The guidelines open the door to a more convention­al camp experience and came out just before camps start opening in some parts of the country, said Tom Rosenberg, president of the American Camp Associatio­n.

The guidance is the first in a wave of updates that will incorporat­e the CDC’S recent decisions on masks and social distancing. Earlier this month, the agency said Americans don’t have to be as cautious about masks and distancing outdoors, and that fully vaccinated people don’t need masks in most situations.

Previously, the CDC advised that just about all people at camps should wear masks with only a few exceptions.

But that was before adults began getting shots in December, and before the U.S. government authorized the Pfizer vaccine for 12- to 15-yearolds earlier this month.

About 2.5 million of the roughly 17 million U.S. kids in that age group have gotten at least one shot. A second dose is also required, three weeks after the first, and then it takes two more weeks before the vaccine fully takes effect.

That means that it will be mid-summer before kids in that age bracket are fully vaccinated. When that happens, “it’s going to be a camp experience that is much more like (before the pandemic),” said Erin Sauber-schatz, who leads the CDC task force that prepares recommenda­tions designed to keep Americans safe from COVID-19.

The new guidance also says social distancing — staying 3 to 6 feet from others — is recommende­d for the unvaccinat­ed, but not for the vaccinated.

Camps likely will have mixed groups of vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed kids and should be prepared to have mask and distancing guidelines in place, CDC officials said.

The camp guidance was updated in reaction to the CDC’S May 13 decision to allow fully vaccinated Americans to stop wearing masks outdoors and in most indoor settings.

Some public health officials and others have criticized that announceme­nt, partly because it seemed to conflict with other CDC guidance.

Not helping matters: Agency officials have said their decision was based on growing medical evidence, but CDC officials provided few specifics.

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