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Do I still have to wear a
mask? What about kids?
By The Associated Press
AP Illustration by Peter Hamlin
www.asianreporter.com
May 19, 2021
The government’s new guidance on masks for vaccinated people has left
some Americans confused and sent businesses and states scrambling to
adjust their rules.
Target and CVS on Monday became the latest retailers to say
vaccinated shoppers and workers don’t have to wear masks in stores. New
York said it will adopt the new mask advice Wednesday, while California
said it will wait a month.
About 123 million Americans — 37% of the population — are fully
vaccinated against coronavirus, and more than 157 million, or 47%, have
received at least one dose.
What’s the new advice?
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) last week said
people who are fully vaccinated no longer need to wear a mask indoors or
outdoors and can stop social distancing in most places. Fully vaccinated
means two weeks after the second dose of the Pfizer or Moderna COVID-19
vaccine, or two weeks after the one-dose Johnson & Johnson shot.
"If you are vaccinated, we are saying you are safe, you can take off
your mask, and you are not at risk of severe disease or hospitalization
from COVID-19," Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the CDC director, said on "Fox
News Sunday." "If you are not vaccinated, you are not safe. Please go
get vaccinated or continue to wear your mask."
Are there exceptions?
Yes. The CDC says everyone — vaccinated or unvaccinated — should
continue to wear a mask in certain places. Masks are still required on
public transportation — busses, trains, and planes — and in other
settings like hospitals, prisons, and homeless shelters. Some states and
businesses and stores are dropping their mask rules for fully vaccinated
people because of the CDC change, while others are keeping them in
place. California is waiting until next month to give the public and
businesses time to prepare.
Why the change?
The CDC director says there was new science in recent weeks that
supported easing the advice on masks and social distancing. She said
there was new evidence that COVID-19 vaccines work in real-world
settings, are effective against virus variants, and prevent the spread
of the virus. In announcing the new advice, she also cited the drop in
infections in the U.S., the wide availability of vaccines, and the
expansion to ages 12 and up for the shots.
"I want to be clear that we followed the science here," she said at a
White House briefing.
What about kids?
Children who haven’t been vaccinated should still wear masks and keep
6 feet apart. The CDC recommends masks for children age 2 and older in
public settings and when with people outside their household. Masks are
also advised in schools. That won’t change for the rest of this school
year and "we’ll be working on school guidance for the fall," Walensky
said on Fox. Childcare and camp guidance will also be updated, she said.
She noted that some children may not understand why they have to wear
a mask if the rest of the family isn’t. "I think that that’s going to
have to be a family by family decision," she said on NBC’s "Meet the
Press."
Can I still wear a mask anyway?
Sure. Even though the guidance has changed, "there’s no need for
everybody to start ripping off their masks," Walensky said on NBC.
"Those behaviors are going to be really hard to change, and there is
no mandate to take it off," she said. "What we’re saying is, now this is
safe."
Who’s going to be checking?
In general, there’s no system yet for checking vaccination records of
those not wearing masks. Schools, businesses, and other places may
require proof of vaccination. The federal government has no plans for a
"vaccine passport."
"What we are really asking the American people to do is to be honest
with themselves and to not remove their masks until they are safe,"
Walensky said on Fox.
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support
from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science
Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
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