U.S. backs distance of 3 feet between students, may help get kids back
in schools
Send a link to a friend
[March 20, 2021]
By Carl O'Donnell
(Reuters) - The U.S. government on Friday updated its COVID-19
mitigation guidance, halving the acceptable distance between students
who are wearing masks to at least three feet (0.91 m) from at least six
feet, potentially easing the path for schools that have struggled to
reopen under previous guidelines.
|
The new recommendation from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) is a boost to the Biden administration's goal of
reopening in-person learning for millions of public school students
without sparking coronavirus outbreaks.
"The revised CDC guidance is a great step," said Dr. Amesh Adalja, a
senior scholar with the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. It
"reflects the fact that schools ... are not drivers of infections,"
he added.
Many schools continue to teach students remotely more than a year
after the novel coronavirus prompted widespread closures across the
United States.
The new guidance was based on data from schools in Utah, Missouri
and Florida that suggests transmission of COVID-19 in schools is
relatively low when precautions such as mask-wearing are employed,
including in cases where students do not maintain six feet of
distance.
The guidance applies to students from kindergarten through high
school and in areas with low, moderate, and substantial community
transmission of COVID-19.
Middle and high school students in communities with high levels of
COVID-19 should stay six feet apart unless their schoolday contact
can be limited to a single small group of students and staff, CDC
said.
"I want to emphasize that these recommendations are specific to
students in classrooms with universal mask-wearing," CDC Director
Rochelle Walensky said in a news conference.
Students should continue to maintain six feet of distance when
interacting with teachers and other school staff and when eating,
the agency said.
The CDC has been under pressure to relax its guidance to schools to
help get students back into classrooms. Walensky said this week the
agency was looking at data in part from a recent study in
Massachusetts that suggested tighter spacing had not increased virus
transmission.
One of the CDC studies released on Friday looked at 20 elementary
schools in Utah during a period of high COVID-19 transmission in the
broader community. It showed that in-school transmission rates among
masked students were low even though they maintained an average
distance between seats of only three feet.
[to top of second column] |
Many schools do not have the
space in classrooms to maintain six feet between
students.
BILLIONS FOR TESTING
The guidance urged schools to conduct widespread
COVID-19 testing of students, saying regular use
of such screening offers added protection for
schools unable to assure six feet of separation.
School districts should expand screenings for
students participating in sports or other
extracurricular activities, and consider
universal screening prior to athletic events,
the guidance added.
The agency continues to recommend quarantines
for anyone who has been within six feet of
someone infected with COVID-19 for more than 15
minutes within a 24-hour period.
The White House on Wednesday said it would
allocate $10 billion to states to support
COVID-19 testing for teachers, staff and
students to help facilitate resumption of
in-person instruction.
The funding, along with recent U.S. regulatory
guidance for screening people without COVID-19
symptoms, will boost demand for coronavirus
testing, Quidel Corp Chief Executive Douglas
Bryant said.
Quidel may need to give school districts
priority over other customers, such as
employers, as it allocates its supply of
COVID-19 tests, Bryant said in an interview.
"We might preferentially support school testing
to the extent we can," Bryant said.
The CDC said students are required to wear masks
on school buses and any other forms of public
transit they use to get to school. The agency
issued an order in February requiring travelers
to wear masks when using public transit.
The Biden administration has urged states to
prioritize vaccination of teachers and childcare
workers, with the goal of getting all of them
inoculated by the end of March.
(Reporting by Carl O'Donnell and Caroline Humer;
Editing by Andrea Ricci and Bill Berkrot)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content |