Rising infection rates and dominance of Delta variant prompt CDC change
JULIA CONLEY for Common Dreams
RI Health Department COVID Data Tracker |
in
parts of the country with low vaccination rates and growing concerns over the
highly transmissible Delta variant, the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention on Tuesday announced new guidance saying people in the U.S. who
are fully vaccinated should wear face masks in indoor public places in certain
parts of the country and that indoor masks will be recommended in school
settings in the fall.
“This new science is worrisome and unfortunately warrants an update to our recommendation," Walensky said of the new, unpublished data, which the CDC gathered in recent days from 100 samples. "It is concerning enough that we feel like we have to act."
In addition to
advising teachers, school staff, students, and visitors to schools to wear
masks inside regardless of vaccination status, the CDC recommended that
vaccinated people wear masks in indoor public spaces if they have young
children who can't be vaccinated or household members who are
immunocompromised or otherwise vulnerable.
The new
guidelines come two months after the CDC said that vaccinated people could go
without masks in both indoor and outdoor settings, launching an effort by the
Biden administration to incentivize vaccinations by suggesting they were the
key to "getting everything back to normal."
"The rule
is very simple: Get vaccinated or wear a mask until you do. It’s vax’ed or
masked," President Joe Biden said in
May during a celebratory event at the White House, the tone and message of
which drew alarm from some public health experts.
National Nurses
United—the country's largest nurses union—was among those that denounced
the CDC's claim that vaccinated people could safely go unmasked in all public
places, saying the
pandemic was "far from over" and noting that the same week the
earlier guidance was released, the CDC had reported a 16% increase in daily new
cases over the previous week.
On Tuesday, the Washington Post reported that
confirmed coronavirus infections have quadrupled nationwide since the beginning
of July. Officials recorded about 13,000 cases per day at the start of the
month and are now recording about 54,000 per day. Less than half of the U.S.
population has been fully vaccinated.
The CDC's new
guidance came a day after officials in New York City and California announced that
public employees will be required to be vaccinated or undergo weekly testing;
California's mandate applies to public- and private-sector healthcare workers
as well.
The White House
also said Monday
that it will continue restricting the entry of travelers from Europe, while the
CDC urged Americans to avoid traveling to Spain and Portugal, which have seen
Covid-19 cases rise by 74% and 18%, respectively, in the last two weeks.
The CDC's new
guidance was applauded Tuesday by public health experts, some of whom had
expressed concern about the loosening of guidelines in May.
"About damn
time," Eric Feigl-Ding, an epidemiologist at the Federation of American
Scientists, tweeted,
adding: "Glad [the CDC] reversed course. But I worry it might be
harder for compliance now than if we kept masks in place in May."
Jeremy Faust, an
emergency physician in Boston, rejected some news outlets' reporting that the
CDC had "backtracked" on its earlier guidance, in which unvaccinated
people were advised to continue masking in public settings.
The call for people to continue masking regardless of vaccination status
"is key," said CNN medical analyst Leana Wen,
"as [the] honor system does not work."
Luis Schang, a
virologist at Cornell University, emphasized that despite the new data about
the Delta variant's viral load, vaccines are still shown to be effective at
preventing the worst outcomes of the disease and that vaccination rates are
rising.
"It's not a
permanent thing. That's an important thing to highlight," Schang told the Post. "This is not
something we have to do for years. This is weeks, perhaps a couple of
months."
Walensky also
said the mask guidance is meant to be a "temporary measure."
"What we
really need to do to drive down these transmissions in the areas of high
transmission is to get more and more people vaccinated and in the meantime, to
use masks," the CDC director said.