Health & Fitness
Georgia Residents Should Consider Masking Up For The Holidays: CDC
Cases of COVID-19, influenza and RSV continue to grow in Georgia, according to state health officials.
GEORGIA — As families and friends in Georgia gather for the holidays, they may want to put on a mask to control the spread of COVID-19, RSV and seasonal flu, the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said this week.
With the spread of COVID-19, RSV and seasonal flu, along with lagging vaccination rates, masking up is one of the best ways Americans can protect themselves, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the CDC director, said Monday in a call with reporters.
Georgia has relaxed its mask guidance and doesn’t require face coverings in public settings. However, many states still require masking for people in high-risk settings, like hospitals, doctor’s offices and nursing homes.
Find out what's happening in Across Georgiafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
In Georgia, there are no statewide mask mandates. Due to an order Gov. Brian Kemp issued in August 2021, local governments cannot impose mask rules on private businesses. Athens-Clarke County fully lifted its indoor mask mandate Oct. 6, when Clarke’s COVID-19 emergency declaration expired. Mandates for indoor mask wearing in Atlanta and Savannah were rescinded in late February.
Mask guidance is based on COVID-19 community levels, and the CDC is considering expanding the dashboard to include seasonal flu and other highly contagious respiratory illnesses to give Americans a clearer picture of when they need to mask up.
Find out what's happening in Across Georgiafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
“One need not wait on CDC action in order to put a mask on,” agency director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said Monday in a call with reporters. “We would encourage all of those preventive measures — handwashing, staying home when you’re sick, masking, increased ventilation — during respiratory virus season, but especially in areas of high COVID-19 community levels.”
Nationally, COVID-19 rates and hospitalizations ticked up slightly over the last couple of weeks, although the number of people who are dying is down sharply, to 1,780 for the week ended Nov. 30 from the pandemic high of 23,372 deaths for the week ending Jan. 13, 2021.
In Georgia, weekly cases grew from 4,062 on Nov. 23 to 6,244 on Nov. 30, according to the CDC. As of Nov. 30, the total death rate per 100,000 was 387 due to COVID-19.
Nationally, only about 12.7 percent of the eligible 5 and older population are vaccinated and fully boosted against COVID-19. In Georgia, nearly 6.9 million have received at least one vaccination dose as of Wednesday, according to the Georgia Department of Public Health’s vaccine distribution dashboard. Fifty-eight percent of Georgians are fully vaccinated against the virus, according to DPH.
All but a handful of states reported “high” or “very high” levels of flu for the week ending Nov. 26, according to CDC data. In Georgia, influenza activity is very high. There were 110 influenza-related hospitalizations in the metro area and one related death. There was one influenza-related outbreak.
About 56 percent of Americans had gotten their flu shots as of Nov. 19, according to the CDC. In Georgia, 36.9 percent of children ages 6 months to 17-years-old are inoculated. As of Oct. 29, 23.8 percent of adults have been vaccinated.
Respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, peaked early, subsided and is picking up again, straining capacity in pediatric units across the country. In the southern region, the number of positive antigen RSV tests was 8.903 while the number of positive PCR tests was 8.316 as of Dec. 3.
Most children get an RSV infection by the time they’re 2, but people can be infected at any age and more than once in a lifetime, according to the CDC.
The symptoms are typically similar to the common cold. But for the extremely young whose lungs aren’t fully developed, the very old and people whose immune systems are compromised, RSV can lead to breathing difficulties.
Masking is still recommended for people using public transportation, or who have weakened immune systems or for other reasons are at heightened risk for severe respiratory illnesses.
Months of hunkering down and avoiding contact with others during the COVID-19 pandemic weakened Americans’ immune systems, according to health experts.
“Public health officials have been bracing for this possibility since early in the pandemic,” Dr. Michael Mina, chief science officer at eMed and one of the nation’s leading epidemiologists, said in a statement to CBS MoneyWatch.
“The recent surges are fully expected ramifications of a new virus that caused massive swings in human behavior,” Mina said. “We know that immunity is working exactly as it was supposed to, and in this case, it means that we drained population-level immunity by not having exposures.”
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