As Americans navigate conflicting COVID-19 mask advice, 'everyone is
confused'
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[July 23, 2021]
By Joseph Ax and Tim Reid
PRINCETON, N.J./SANTA MONICA, Calif.
(Reuters) - A COVID-19 surge ignited in parts of the United States by
the highly contagious Delta variant and vaccine hesitancy has led to new
mask mandates and deep confusion among some people about which guidance
to follow.
In Los Angeles County, leaders have reinstated an indoor mask mandate,
even for the fully vaccinated. Officials in Houston and New Orleans also
raised coronavirus alert levels this week and told people to mask up.
In Florida, however, Governor Ron DeSantis said on Thursday children
will not be required to wear masks in school there this fall, arguing
that "we need our kids to breathe." Hours later, White House press
secretary Jen Psaki told reporters: "If I were a parent in Florida, that
would be greatly concerning to me."
"Everyone is confused about what they should be doing," said Daniel
Blacksheare, a 20-year-old in Santa Monica, California, who said he was
infected twice last year. "I don't understand why we have to suddenly
wear a mask again."
The county sheriff in Los Angeles County said his department will not
enforce the measure.
The conflicting advice from officials at city, county, state and federal
levels of government comes as hospital officials in the harder-hit
states with lower vaccination rates are sounding the alarm about their
systems being overwhelmed.
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The seven-day average of new COVID-19 cases in the United States is up
53% over the previous week, according to the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention on Thursday. The Delta variant makes up more than 80% of
the new cases across the country.
Much of the guidance falls along the same political lines as earlier in
the pandemic. Leaders in heavily Republican states generally eschew
masks, and Democrats insist upon them.
Schools are a particular tension point nationwide. Children under age 12
are still not eligible for coronavirus vaccines, and many parents
consider masks as the best remaining defense.
Yet as some areas return to the classroom in just a few weeks, there are
wide divisions over whether children should be wearing masks in schools.
The American Academy of Pediatrics this week released updated
recommendations for schools that included mask wearing for everyone over
the age of 2, regardless of vaccination status. President Joe Biden said
on Wednesday that unvaccinated children should wear masks in schools.
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People wear masks, as cases of the infectious Delta variant of
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continue to rise, in Washington
Square Park in New York City, U.S., July 22, 2021. REUTERS/Brendan
McDermid/File Photo
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But the CDC on Thursday said it is not changing its
mask guidance for schools, including that masks are only required
for those over age 2 who have not been vaccinated. The CDC in May
relaxed its guidance so that fully vaccinated people do not need to
wear masks in most public spaces.
In Princeton, New Jersey, Ximena Skovron said she finds the dust-ups
over masks and what the guidance actually is to be perplexing.
"I'm vaccinated, and the rules seem to change," she said. "But it's
also inconsistent. You've got two grocery stores in town: one
requires masks, one doesn't."
Skovron said she does not think states should reimpose mask
mandates.
"Vaccines are readily available. The ability to protect yourself is
there," she said. "If you refuse, you should assume the risk instead
of imposing on the rest of society."
Her 6-year-old daughter will enter first grade this fall, and
Skovron said she hopes the school does not require masks, citing the
extremely low rate of serious COVID-19 incidence among small
children.
"It just seems like such overkill for children to wear masks," she
said.
But Melissa Riccobono, 44, of Lawrenceville, New Jersey, said she is
pro-mask and thinks there should be mandates when and where
necessary.
"If you're choosing not to vaccinate, that's your choice, and I'm
fine with that – but it's not your choice whether to wear a mask,"
she said.
(Reporting by Tim Reid in Santa Monica, California, and Joseph Ax in
Princeton, New Jersey; Additional reporting by Brad Brooks in
Lubbock, Texas, and Carl O'Donnell in Washington; Editing by Colleen
Jenkins and Grant McCool)
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