Los Angeles Times

CDC relaxes mask recommenda­tions

Momentous move applies to the fully vaccinated. Local government­s will still make the final call.

- By Rong-Gong Lin II and Hayley Smith

In a profound sign of America’s progress against COVID-19, federal officials on Thursday announced a sweeping relaxation of face mask guidelines, which now suggest fully vaccinated people can stop wearing masks in most places — either outdoors or inside.

The move is a milestone moment in the pandemic, upending one of the most basic safety protocols to reduce the spread of the coronaviru­s. It comes as daily virus cases in California and most other parts of the United States are plummeting and more people are getting vaccinated.

“Today is a great day for America,” President Biden said. “It’s been made possible by the extraordin­ary success we’ve had in vaccinatin­g so many Americans so quickly.”

Though there has been growing pressure to end mask mandates, the sweeping changes stunned some people who had become used to wearing masks. Some experts expressed concern that the relaxation would make it easier for the unvaccinat­ed to flout rules and shed masks inside stores and other businesses, putting people at greater risk who cannot be vaccinated, such as young children with preexistin­g health conditions.

But others hope it will encourage more people to get vaccinated.

The guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are only recommenda­tions, however, and the final call will largely be decided by state and local government­s.

California has strict mask rules consistent with the CDC’s previous mask guidance and officials said they will remain in effect at least for now as they study the new recommenda­tions.

The state and Los Angeles County will review the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s recommenda­tions in order to “make sensible adjustment­s to the orders that are currently in place,” L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said.

The California Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health’s mask-wearing requiremen­ts at businesses — including restaurant­s and supermarke­ts — remain in effect.

“Because it’s still important to protect workers at all work sites, and all work sites must follow requiremen­ts set forth by the California Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health, we ask that everyone continue to adhere to required distanc

ing and masking at workplaces until Cal-OSHA changes these requiremen­ts,” Ferrer said.

It could be a week or more before substantiv­e changes to mask-wearing orders take effect locally. Cal-OSHA next meets on May 20 to discuss statewide guidance, and county changes would not be any less restrictiv­e than the state’s mandates.

Federal officials said more-specific rules regulating masks in places such as businesses, schools and other settings where it may be hard to determine who is or is not vaccinated will probably be determined at the local level.

Nonetheles­s, federal officials hailed the new guidance as a momentous step in the pandemic.

“Anyone who is fully vaccinated can participat­e in indoor and outdoor activities, large or small, without wearing a mask or physical distancing,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the director of the CDC, told reporters. “If you are fully vaccinated, you can start doing the things you have stopped doing because of the pandemic.”

Under the federal guidance, unvaccinat­ed or partly vaccinated people are still asked to wear masks in almost all indoor settings and most outdoor venues when interactin­g with people from outside their household who may not be vaccinated.

(Members of a single household of unvaccinat­ed people can be maskless indoors if everyone else is vaccinated and can go without masks at small outdoor gatherings with other unvaccinat­ed people.)

A person is considered fully vaccinated two weeks after the final dose of a vaccine.

The CDC order remains in effect that requires masks to be worn by everyone traveling on public transporta­tion, including buses and trains, and at airports and stations.

Across the U.S., 46.6% of the population has received at least one dose of vaccine; in California, at least 49.8% of residents are at least partly vaccinated.

Biden urged those without full vaccinatio­n to keep masking up. “Please protect yourself until you get to the finish line, because as great as this announceme­nt is today, we don’t want to let up. ... The safest thing for the country is for everyone to get vaccinated.”

The announceme­nt comes as scientists have reported an array of positive developmen­ts in just the last several weeks.

Just two months ago, there were worries that the U.S. was heading toward a fourth wave, and how bad it would be was unknown. But a robust vaccinatio­n campaign seems to have decisively helped turn the tide.

Though the U.S. was once criticized for a slow vaccine rollout, it now has the fourth-fastest per capita rate of vaccine administra­tion, behind only Israel, the United Kingdom and Bahrain, according to UC San Francisco infectious­disease specialist Dr. Monica Gandhi.

The average number of new coronaviru­s cases nationwide, over a weekly period, has fallen to 36,800 a day — a 23% decrease from the previous seven-day period and a 50% drop from the peak of the fourth wave recorded a month ago, driven by a spike in coronaviru­s infections in Michigan. Hospitaliz­ations and COVID-19 deaths are down, with reported fatalities in the last week dropping 12% from the previous weekly period.

California managed to escape the spike that plagued the Midwest and East Coast, with scientists crediting the state’s relative embrace of vaccines; L.A. County was also helped by the lingering immunity that remains among survivors of the devastatin­g fall-andwinter surge. California is reporting its lowest COVID19 hospitaliz­ation numbers since the first few weeks of the pandemic last spring.

Vaccine supply problems in the U.S. have eased, and it is easier than ever to get a shot, with many sites no longer needing to require appointmen­ts for doses.

On Thursday, vaccine appointmen­ts became available for everyone age 12 or older.

Additional­ly, data continue to emerge that bolster increasing confidence among scientists that the vaccines in use work effectivel­y against variants — including those first identified in the United Kingdom, South Africa, Brazil, California, New York and India.

Even in rare events where a coronaviru­s of any type breaks through the immunity of a fully vaccinated person, the resulting infection is most likely to be short and provide less risk of transmissi­on to others, Walensky said. Though there are reports of seven members of the New York Yankees’ coaching and support staff testing positive for the coronaviru­s despite being fully vaccinated with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, Walensky said six of those cases appear to have resulted in asymptomat­ic infections.

There have been some reports of coronaviru­s breaking through the immunity of fully vaccinated people among medical personnel in India, but overall data still show the vaccines being effective there.

“All of the real world data we’ve seen that’s been in the published literature — large studies in many different settings — have demonstrat­ed that those vaccines are effective,” Walensky said.

In addition, evidence is mounting that not only do vaccines protect against getting sick, but also against asymptomat­ic infection too. A recent study from Israel found 97% vaccine effectiven­ess against symptomati­c infection and 86% effectiven­ess against asymptomat­ic infection in more than 5,000 healthcare workers, Walensky said. In the U.S., vaccines were 90% effective against any infection in nearly 4,000 healthcare workers.

Some health experts welcomed the CDC’s new guidance.

“I am very excited that we have reached this momentous time when those who are fully vaccinated can now get back to virtually prepandemi­c activities without concern of disease themselves,” UCLA medical epidemiolo­gist Dr. Robert KimFarley said. “However, they still need to realize that if they are around unvaccinat­ed people [who] may be vulnerable — the elderly, those with medical conditions — they still need to practice caution in that setting.”

Walensky noted that people with compromise­d immune systems should speak to their doctors before giving up their masks. And unvaccinat­ed people who “remain at risk of mild or severe illness, of death or of spreading the disease to others” should still wear masks and get vaccinated right away, she said.

“If things get worse, there is always a chance we may need to make a change to these recommenda­tions,” Walensky said, “but we know that the more people are vaccinated, the less cases we will have and the less chance of a new spike or additional variant emerging.”

Walensky said the agency also will be updating all of its guidance — including for travel.

Gandhi, the UC San Francisco expert in infectious disease, has been among those who urged the CDC to move faster to lift mask guidelines and was surprised at how fast federal officials acted Thursday. She welcomed the news and said the science backs up the new recommenda­tions.

She said lifting mask guidance for fully vaccinated people will provide an incentive for those who may have put off getting the shot.

“People need incentives now,” Gandhi said. “I think this is going to help people who are on the fence to go and get vaccinated.”

The new guidance, however, works best if people follow the rules — and unvaccinat­ed people don’t shed their masks before they’ve been vaccinated.

“I do see maybe having to show vaccinatio­n cards to get into movie theaters or restaurant­s,” said Dr. George Rutherford, an infectious-disease expert at UC San Francisco. “Private businesses can enforce vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts.”

California’s rules, last updated May 3, generally require masks to be worn by everyone indoors other than when at home, with exceptions, such as when you’re outside a workplace setting and everyone indoors is vaccinated; or when members of only one unvaccinat­ed household are present and all have a low risk of severe complicati­ons should they get COVID-19.

Unvaccinat­ed people must also wear masks outdoors at any time they can’t maintain six feet of distance from someone else. Fully vaccinated people need to wear masks outdoors only in crowded settings, such as live performanc­es, parades, fairs, festivals and sports events.

 ?? MEL MELCON Los Angeles Times ?? KATHY LY, left, a hairstylis­t at the Headline Salon in Woodland Hills, gives a cut to Gerri Gold, 81. At right is Gold’s husband, Hal Gold, 95. Mask-wearing guidelines will now probably be determined at the local level.
MEL MELCON Los Angeles Times KATHY LY, left, a hairstylis­t at the Headline Salon in Woodland Hills, gives a cut to Gerri Gold, 81. At right is Gold’s husband, Hal Gold, 95. Mask-wearing guidelines will now probably be determined at the local level.

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