The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Delta chided for reference to ‘ordinary seasonal virus’

Airline amends release about end of mask mandate.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kelly.yamanouchi@ajc.com

Delta Air Lines sparked backlash late Monday for calling COVID-19 an “ordinary seasonal virus” as it stopped requiring masks on flights following a federal judge’s ruling voiding the federal mask mandate for transporta­tion.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has not declared an end to the pandemic, though the top officer of the Atlanta-based agency has said the virus is likely to become seasonal. And the World Health Organizati­on last week said COVID19 is still a global health emergency.

In a press release Monday night announcing its new mask-optional policy, Delta said it was “relieved to see the U.S. mask mandate lift to facilitate global travel as COVID-19 has transition­ed to an ordinary seasonal virus.”

By Tuesday morning, after a flurry of criticism, Delta changed course and instead referred to it as “a more manageable respirator­y virus.”

“We are relieved to see the U.S. mask mandate lift to facilitate global travel as COVID-19 transition­s to a more manageable respirator­y virus — with better treatments, vaccines and other scientific measures to prevent serious illness,” the airline’s amended statement said.

It was not the first time Delta has referred to COVID19 as a seasonal.

Last week, Delta CEO Ed Bastian labeled it as such while discussing the company’s

financial results.

Dr. Henry Ting, Delta’s chief health officer, said last November before the omicron surge that “we’re coming down from the surge and entering an endemic stage,” Business Travel News reported. He added then that “we will see this become a seasonal respirator­y virus.”

In late March, Ting said at a CNBC event that a transition was occurring from “a global pandemic to a seasonal respirator­y virus.”

Public health officials have said the virus is likely to become endemic, such as seasonal flus.

CDC director Rochelle Walensky said last month, “I do anticipate that this is probably going to be a seasonal virus,” NBC News reported. However, Walensky did not say COVID-19 already had become a seasonal virus.

Still, last winter’s omicron wave, which was highly infectious but produced a lower overall percentage of severe disease, pushed U.S. hospitals

to the brink and triggered a fifth wave of deaths.

Antiviral treatments now exist, though access remains a challenge. Much of the world, meanwhile, has yet to gain access to vaccines, and shots have yet to be authorized in the U.S. for children under age 5.

The virus has shown the ability to adapt to immune defenses from past infection and vaccinatio­n. Still, public health experts say data shows the full course of the authorized vaccines decrease the risk of infection and are highly effective at preventing severe disease and death.

Delta’s decision to call it a seasonal virus prompted criticism from some health experts.

Eric Feigl-ding, an epidemiolo­gist and health economist, called the statement “wrong” on Twitter and urged the airline to correct it. Gregg Gonsalves, a Yale University School of Medicine epidemiolo­gist, said

Delta’s statement was “bonkers” and accused the carrier of misleading its customers.

While Delta took a lead role early in the pandemic in rolling out COVID-19 policies, including blocking middle seats, requiring masks and cleaning planes, it has since ended many of its earlier COVID practices and pushed for a rollback of mask mandates and COVID testing before internatio­nal flights.

Some of the previous COVID-19 policies were aimed at convincing travelers it was safe to fly, as Delta sought to recover from the effects of the pandemic.

Passenger levels have rebounded to more than 2 million people passing through airport security checkpoint­s nationally on many days.

Delta president Glen Hauenstein said last week that “everything we see right now points to a very, very robust travel through the remainder of spring and summer.”

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM ?? Delta Air Lines said it was “relieved” by a federal judge’s ruling but amended a statement calling COVID-19 an “ordinary seasonal virus.”
ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM Delta Air Lines said it was “relieved” by a federal judge’s ruling but amended a statement calling COVID-19 an “ordinary seasonal virus.”

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