U.S. eases COVID indoor mask guidelines for most of country
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[February 26, 2022]
By Julie Steenhuysen
(Reuters) - The U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) on Friday dramatically eased its COVID-19
guidelines for masks, including in schools, a move that means 72% of the
population reside in communities where indoor face coverings are no
longer recommended.
The new masking guidelines shift from a focus on the rate of COVID-19
transmission to monitoring local hospitalizations, hospital capacity and
infection rates.
Under the prior guidelines, 95% of U.S. counties were considered to be
experiencing high transmission, leaving just 5% of U.S. counties meeting
the agency's criteria for dropping indoor mask requirements.
"We're in a stronger place today as a nation with more tools to protect
ourselves and our community from COVID-19," CDC Director Rochelle
Walensky said during a media briefing on Friday.
She cited the availability of vaccines and boosters, broader access to
testing, the availability of high quality masks and the accessibility to
new treatments and improved ventilation.
"With widespread population immunity, the overall risk of severe disease
is now generally lower," Walensky said.
The moves come as the wave of coronavirus infections caused by the
easily spread Omicron variant subsides substantially in the United
States and states such as New Jersey have announced plans to lift indoor
mask mandates for schools and other public places in the coming days.
The new policy is broken down into three categories - low, medium and
high risk - based on hospital capacity and cases.
It advises people in medium-risk communities who are at increased risk
of complications from the disease, such as those with compromised immune
systems, to ask their doctors if they should be wearing a mask.
With the pandemic now in its third year, many Americans have tired of
wearing masks. In addition, studies have shown that for vaccinated
people, infections from the Omicron variant were less severe and less
likely to cause hospitalization and death than previous versions of the
coronavirus.
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Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention testifies during a Senate Health, Education, Labor, and
Pensions Committee hearing to examine the federal response to the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) and new emerging variants at Capitol
Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S. January 11, 2022. Shawn Thew/Pool via
REUTERS
Travelers will still need to wear
masks on airplanes, trains and buses and at airports and train
stations. Those requirements expire on March 18, and the CDC will
revisit them in the coming weeks, Walensky said.
The new guidelines apply regardless of vaccination status.
Dr. Amesh Adalja, in infectious disease expert at the Johns Hopkins
Center for Health Security, said the changes made sense given
transmission rates in the United States are high, but
hospitalization rates remained low.
"Focusing on hospital capacity is a much better metric and has
always been the overriding concern," he said in an email.
The CDC said universal school masking would now be advised only in
communities with a "high" level of COVID-19. The earlier
recommendation advised masking in schools no matter the level of
COVID transmission.
"We need to be flexible and to be able to say we need to relax our
layers of preventive measures when things are looking up," Walensky
said. "And then we need to be able to dial them up again, should we
have a new variant, during the surge."
The CDC has come under fire for changes in its stance on masking.
Last spring, Walensky told vaccinated Americans it was safe to take
off their masks indoors in low transmission areas, but reversed
course a few months later when it became clear that fully vaccinated
people could transmit the virus.
In an interview with Reuters earlier this month, Walensky said "now
is not the time" to remove masks in schools after announcements by
officials in New Jersey, Connecticut, Delaware, California and
Oregon that they planed to lift indoor mask mandates for schools and
other indoor spaces.
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago; additional reporting by
Michael Erman in New Jersey and Leroy Leo and Dania Nadeem in
Bengaluru; Editing by Caroline Humer and Bill Berkrot)
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