Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Mask Mandates Are Ending
Late last year, Rochelle Walensky, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, made a commitment about face masks, one of the defining symbols of the Covid-19 pandemic. 鈥淢asks are for now, they鈥檙e not forever,鈥 Walensky told ABC News. 鈥淲e have to find a way to be done with them.鈥 On Friday, Walensky is expected to deliver at least in part on that pledge, outlining long-awaited new guidance on when the CDC believes people should consider wearing masks and when they might safely stash them in a drawer for a time. (Branswell, 2/25)
Most California voters support mandated Covid-19 vaccinations and masking for students and teachers at K-12 schools, according to a new survey by the UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies. About two-thirds of the roughly 9,000 respondents said they wanted the precautions to contain the virus, according to the poll, which was co-sponsored and published by the Los Angeles Times on Thursday. The views diverged according to political affiliation: While about 85% of Democrats backed vaccine mandates for schools about 70% of Republicans opposed them. (McGregor, 2/24)
While more mask mandates have been lifted across the country this week, some have also acted to reverse proof of COVID-19 vaccination requirements.聽In New Hampshire, schools will no longer be allowed to mandate masks.聽"I don鈥檛 think this should be viewed as a drastic change or measure, it鈥檚 just kind of another step forward as we continue to return to the old normal," Gov. Chris Sununu聽said. "We know that masking can be a very powerful tool in times of surging transmissibility, but it obviously has drawbacks, especially for kids in schools and those with disabilities." (Musto, 2/24)
Also 鈥
KHN: The Stress Of Restaurant Work Is Reaching A Boiling Point. Could A Staff Therapist Help?
Restaurant jobs have always been difficult, but the mental stress has gotten worse during the pandemic as restaurants closed or cut hours 鈥 or became ground zero for the fight over mask-wearing. 鈥淚t is totally nerve-wracking sometimes because all of my tables I鈥檓 interacting with aren鈥檛 wearing their masks,鈥 said Nikki Perri, a server at French 75, a restaurant in downtown Denver. 鈥淚 am within 6 feet of people who are maskless.鈥 Perri is 23, a DJ, and a music producer. And she鈥檚 not just worrying about her own health. (Daley, 2/25)
Meanwhile in Florida 鈥
Gov. Ron DeSantis and Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo unveiled a series of updated COVID-19 guidelines on Thursday in an announcement that criticized current recommendations from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The state鈥檚 Department of Health, which Ladapo leads, is now recommending that businesses should stop requiring employees to wear masks. The department is giving doctors a way to complain to state regulators if healthcare facilities don鈥檛 approve of their treatment plans for COVID-19 patients. And the state says Floridians can stop isolating and reappear maskless in public five days after testing positive for the virus 鈥 as long as they have no fever and their symptoms are improving. (Wilson, 2/24)
As states and cities across the country begin lifting Covid-19 restrictions, Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said on Thursday that her city is 鈥渕oving out of crisis and into safety mode. 鈥漇peaking at POLITICO鈥檚 The Fifty: America鈥檚 Mayors summit, Levine Cava recounted that Miami-Dade had the highest vaccination rates in the state and managed 70,000 testing at the height of Omicron surge over the fall and winter. She added that her city provided the latest treatments as well, including monoclonal antibody treatments. (Matat, 2/24)