Health & Fitness

CDC Updates COVID Mask Guidelines: What It Means In Massachusetts

As the Bay State continues to have declining numbers in COVID-19 hospitalizations, mask requirements are dropping from town to town.

MASSACHUSETTS — The Biden administration dramatically loosened its federal COVID-19 mask guidance Friday as infection rates return to pre-omicron variant levels around the country.

The bottom line: About 70 percent of Americans will be able to shed their masks while indoors. In Massachusetts, the mask requirement for public schools will be lifted next week, and mask mandates are continuing to drop from town to town.

Worcester and Framingham recently repealed their mask mandates, but Boston continues to hold on to masks even after Boston Mayor Michelle Wu lifted requiring proof of vaccination for public indoor spaces last week.

Find out what's happening in Across Massachusettsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

As most of the Bay State chooses to lift school mask mandates at the end of the month, Wu says Boston Public Schools aren't ready for that yet.

The new framework categorizes counties by "low," "medium" or "high" risk. The CDC isn't recommending mask-wearing in the first two categories, except among people who have underlying health conditions that put them at high risk for COVID-19.

Find out what's happening in Across Massachusettsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

In schools, masking is only recommended in counties with a high risk of infection.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention previously recommended that people wear masks in areas with substantial or high transmission — roughly about 95 percent of U.S. counties, according to the latest data. The new guidance comes as the virus becomes endemic and the Biden administration focuses on preventing serious illness and death from COVID-19 rather than all instances of infection.

CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky tweeted Thursday that the agency is shifting its focus to concentrate on preventing the spread of COVID-19 to minimize the strain on the health care system.

In a White House briefing last week, she said hospital capacity is an "important barometer."

"Our hospitals need to be able to take care of people with heart attacks and strokes," she said. "Our emergency departments can't be so overwhelmed that patients with emergent issues have to wait in line."

In her Thursday night tweets, Walensky said community infection rates will determine when and where extra precautions such as mask wearing and testing should be targeted.

"Moving forward, our approach will advise enhanced prevention efforts in communities with a high volume of severe illness and will also focus on protecting our healthcare systems from being overwhelmed," she tweeted.

The omicron variant of the coronavirus is highly contagious, but generally causes less severe COVID-19 illnesses than other variants, especially among people who are fully vaccinated and boosted, data shows.

Daily U.S. COVID-19 infection rates are down to about 82,000 cases nationwide, according to a database kept by The New York Times, and hospitalizations are down about 44 percent. However, about 2,000 people a day still are dying of the virus, The Times reported.

Omicron infection rates in Massachusetts are continuing to decline rapidly, the Department of Public Health said Thursday.

For the first time since early August, the Commonwealth reported fewer than 1,000 average daily confirmed COVID-19 cases over the last week.

All key COVID-19 metrics, including deaths, cases, and hospitalizations, declined statewide. The seven-day positive test rate dropped from 2.8 to 2.21 percent over the last week in Massachusetts.

The Associated Press contributed reporting.

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