![Mandatory School Masking Should End
After Omicron Surge](http://www.qatar-tribune.com/Data/20220202/Images/634771.jpg)
Mandatory School Masking Should End After Omicron Surge
Qatar Tribune
Michelle Goldberg Elissa Perkins, the director of infectious disease management in the emergency department of the Boston Medical Center, told me she spent...
Michelle GoldbergElissa Perkins, the director of infectious disease management in the emergency department of the Boston Medical Center, told me she spent most of 2020 âimploring everybody I could in every forum that I could to mask.â In the beginning, she said, this was to flatten the curve, and later to protect the vulnerable. But masking, she said, âwas intended to be a short-term intervention,â and she believes we havenât talked enough about the drawbacks of mandating them for kids long-term.âIf we accept that we donât want masks to be required in our schools forever, we have to decide when is the right time to remove them,â she said. âAnd thatâs a conversation that weâre not really having.âAt least, people in deep blue areas werenât having it until recently. But as the omicron wave begins to ebb, that conversation â sometimes tentatively and sometimes acrimoniously â has begun. This week, Ms Perkins co-wrote a Washington Post essay calling for schools to make masking optional. The Atlantic published an article titled, âThe Case Against Masks at School.âThe debate about masks in schools can quickly turn vicious because it pits legitimate interests against one another. Many people who are immunocompromised, or live with those who are, understandably fear that getting rid of mandates will make them more vulnerable. But keeping kids in masks month after month also inflicts harm, even if itâs not always easy to measure.The chief executive of the Prince Georgeâs County public schools in Maryland recently downplayed the idea of a future without masks, saying: âThe only off-ramp I want is the one where COVID no longer exists. I donât think that that off-ramp will exist.ââThere are significant issues related to language acquisition, pronunciation, things like that,â Ms. erkins said. âAnd there are very clear social and emotional side effects in the older kids.âThatâs why I believe that mandatory school masking should end when coronavirus rates return to pre-Omicron levels. I fully accept that, in future surges, masks might have to go back on, but thatâs all the more reason to get them off as soon as possible, to give students some reprieve.Otherwise, I fear that, at least in very liberal areas, a combination of extreme risk aversion and inertia means that school masking will persist indefinitely. The chief executive of the Prince Georgeâs County public schools in Maryland recently downplayed the idea of a future without masks, saying: âThe only off-ramp I want is the one where COVID no longer exists. I donât think that that off-ramp will exist.â I hope this attitude isnât widespread, but if it is, it will be incumbent for progressive parents desperate for an off-ramp to push back.Thereâs some question about how well masks in school really work; many studies are confounded, since communities with school mask mandates tend to adopt other COVID mitigation measures as well.And the fact that experts can poke holes in some studies of masking does not mean that masks donât make a difference. âUnfortunately itâs being painted as black or white, itâs like either they work or they donât, but with everything itâs nuance and thereâs a gradient,â said Erin Bromage, an associate professor of biology at the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth. Cloth masks, he said, might reduce the chance of omicron transmission by â10% going out and 10% coming in.â Thatâs not nothing, but it does suggest that the mask mandates we have now arenât as protective as some might think.Higher-quality masks, obviously, are much more effective, which is why Los Angeles is now requiring upgraded masks in schools. But before other cities follow, we need to ask whether we really want to make school mask policies even stricter at a time when vaccinations for kids are widely available, as are masks that protect the wearer even if those around them are unmasked.As Harvardâs Joseph G Allen has written, âFor anyone who fears moving away from universal masking, the great news is that they can continue to wear an N95 mask â along with being vaccinated and boosted â and live a low-risk life regardless of what others around them are doing.â There was a time when N95s were hard to get, but now the Biden administration has started providing them free. And younger kids who canât wear adult-size N95s can wear KN95s and KF94s.For those of us who eagerly awaited the approval of vaccines for kids over 5, the timing of Omicron has been particularly cruel. For almost two years, many of us told our children that once they were vaccinated, they could reclaim many of the ordinary joys theyâd had to sacrifice. Omicron postponed that reclamation. It shouldnât be postponed a moment longer than necessary.(Michelle Goldberg is a columnist for The New York Times.)