'You feel naked': Some Americans hesitate to shed masks despite eased
outdoor rules
Send a link to a friend
[May 07, 2021]
By Gabriella Borter
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Anita Glick felt
somewhat liberated as she walked her friend's dog around Washington's
Capitol Hill neighborhood this week, her face mask looped around a wrist
thanks to U.S. health authorities' new guidance on outdoor mask wearing.
But even under the eased U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
rules, which say people like her who are vaccinated against COVID-19
need not wear masks outside in most cases, the 70-year-old retired
teacher said she would keep hers on around others as a courtesy.
"I don't really want to make a total stranger go through, 'Should I
cross the street? Has she been vaccinated? Could she be infected?'" said
Glick, fully inoculated since February.
She added that she might keep wearing masks in the future to help with
her seasonal allergies, even though "they're a pain, and they fog up my
glasses, and if I've just eaten something I'm smelling it all day".
Many vaccinated Americans started tentatively shedding their masks this
week, a major break from behavior they were conditioned to exhibit for
more than a year to help curb the coronavirus pandemic.
Beyond their disease prevention benefits, masks in the United States
have become symbols of political views and morality. Those associations
have made it harder for some people to take off their masks, despite the
developing scientific guidance.
Interviews with more than a dozen people in and around the nation's
capital revealed a variety of reasons why some Americans are reluctant
to remove their masks - or never felt compelled to wear them outside in
the first place.
College students Emmanuel Long and AJ Barber, both 19 and fully
vaccinated, wore masks this week while visiting the Lincoln Memorial.
Long worried the CDC was premature in saying masking outdoors is not
necessary unless in crowds, since COVID-19 is still a very real risk,
particularly for immuno-compromised people.
"You feel naked if you don't go outside with a mask on," Barber said.
The CDC's rule change has tested Americans' faith in the COVID-19
vaccines, which have been administered to more than 148 million people
in the United States. Some who are vaccinated noted the rare cases where
inoculated people contract the virus as their reason for feeling
uncomfortable without a mask.
"I don't think I'm Superman," said Andrew Nussbaum, 57, his mask nearby
as he drank coffee at an outdoor table in Great Falls, Virginia, a
suburban community some 20 miles from Washington.
Nussbaum, who is vaccinated against COVID-19, said he was recently
alarmed when he went to a friend's house and learned that some at the
indoor gathering had not gotten their shots.
[to top of second column]
|
A woman walks without a protective face mask, after the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced new guidelines
regarding outdoor mask wearing and vaccinations during the outbreak
of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Manhattan, New York City,
U.S., April 27, 2021. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo
"I still worry that I will pick it up, I might be one
of those weird cases," he said.
LINGERING SKEPTICISM
Vivi Smith, a 60-year-old lawyer in Washington, said the CDC lost
some credibility with her when it "flip-flopped" on masks at the
start of the pandemic. The agency and other health officials
initially said the general public did not need to wear masks, but
later walked back that guidance and attributed it to their concerns
over mask shortages for healthcare workers.
Smith wore a mask as she and several friends planted elderberries at
her local community garden last week. Although they are fully
vaccinated, she knows many in her area who are not and does not want
to take a chance.
"I respect your right right now to follow the CDC and not wear a
mask outdoors," she said. "But if I see you coming, I'm crossing the
street!"
The new guidance also rang hollow in some suburban and rural areas
where mask-wearing was less common outdoors, and in conservative
states and counties where the practice was never widely adopted.
Many Americans in those places saw mask mandates as infringing on
personal liberty, views encouraged by former President Donald Trump,
who said mask use should be voluntary, undermining the advice of his
public health advisors.
Erin Lobato, 55, said the CDC announcement had not changed her life
in Great Falls. She said she rarely wore a mask outside, although
she is not vaccinated, and never felt the peer pressure to do so
that she said she had heard about in larger, more liberal cities.
"It's nice to be able to see that the CDC is catching up and
hopefully enabling all of us to get back to some sense of normal
soon," said Lobato, who runs a local nonprofit promoting the town.
City-dweller Tobias Krahnke felt a different kind of relief.
Previously, the 35-year-old economist said, he had been wary of
giving any appearance that he supported the conservative, anti-mask
movement. But this week he felt empowered to go maskless while
playing tennis at a D.C. park.
"You don't want to be associated with a Trump voter," he said. "But
now you can just say 'Look, I'm just following the CDC guidelines.'"
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter; Additional reporting by Maria
Caspani; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Daniel Wallis)
[© 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. |