Schools
Williamson County Pediatricians Push For School Mask Mandates
As of July 29, pediatric cases comprised 20% of COVID cases in Tennessee.

By Dulce Torres Guzman, Tennessee Lookout
August 10, 2021
As Williamson County parents, physicians urged school officials to prevent the possibility of “needless” deaths of children from COVID-19 by mandating masks.
Find out what's happening in Across Tennesseefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
On Monday, several physicians called on Williamson County Public School Board members, private school administrators and elected officials to follow Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines for all children returning to school among rising delta variant cases. Those guidelines call for all students ages 2 and older to wear masks indoors, regardless of vaccination status.
“Hear our voices as the pediatricians taking care of these children in Williamson County, Davidson County, in our clinics, our hospitals and our ICUs. As you can see, we are scared of what the next few months will unfold,” said Dr. Vidya Bansal, a board-certified pediatrician.
Tennessee currently ranks 49th for COVID-19 vaccinations and ranks 5th for the total number of child COVID-19 cases, according to American Academy of Pediatrics.
Find out what's happening in Across Tennesseefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
As of July 29, pediatric cases comprised 20% of COVID cases in the state, with 5,573 new cases among children ages 5 to 18, the physicians said. Out of 536 children hospitalized, 10 children have died in Tennessee, including two Shelby County children in one weekend.
According to the state health dashboard, there were 4,491 child cases as of Aug. 1, comprising 21.1% of cases.
These figures have blown away all preconceived notions of the pandemic that only elderly people were dying, said several physicians.
“We do not yet know how our children will handle the delta variant, but we do know that if all 40,000 students caught COVID this school year, it is estimated that 24 of them would die, and this estimation is based on the original strain,” said Dr. Jennifer Ker, a board-certified pediatrician.
CDC guidelines now recommend that fully vaccinated people wear masks in public indoor settings, especially in densely populated locations, and recommend schools implement a universal indoor masking for all teachers, staff, students and visitors, regardless of vaccination status.
Several school systems across Tennessee have already started their fall semester, but few school systems have implemented mandatory mask requirements, including Shelby County Schools and Metro Nashville Public Schools.
Williamson County Public School officials have yet to mandate masks, despite ranking third for child COVID-19 cases, making the variant “more contagious than chicken pox,” said Bansal.
Children under age 12 are not eligible for the vaccine, and without a mask mandate, the Tennessee Health Commissioner, Dr. Lisa Piercey, is predicting children’s hospitals will be full by the end of this week.
Death and long-term health related issues are real threats to children, pediatricians stressed.
“Failure to listen to the physicians and nurses taking care of these COVID cases and failure to recognize that COVID remains a threat in our schools when both are unmasked and not eligible for the vaccine is a willful act of harm to the children’s right to life,” said Bansal.
“Kids don’t die from wearing masks,” she added.
Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit network of state government news sites supported by grants and a coalition of donors.