The CDC’s most recent change involves the guidance it released in late April outlining safety procedures for summer camps operating amid the pandemic. The 14-page document suggests multiple risk mitigation efforts, including recommending that campers and counselors stay socially distanced and emphasizing the use of face coverings during most activities—even while outside. “All people in camp facilities should wear masks at all times, with exceptions for certain people, or for certain settings or activities, such as while eating and drinking or swimming,” the guidelines state. But during a press conference on May 5, CDC director Rochelle Walensky, MD, announced that the agency had updated its summer camp guidance. Now, teenagers and adolescents aged 12 and up who are fully vaccinated will be able to take their masks off while outdoors. During the press conference, Walensky explained that the mask guidelines were based on CDC case studies of superspreader events linked to camps last summer. “So if you have five 10-year-olds who are on a soccer field, all in front of the same soccer ball, we’re trying to make sure that there are not a lot of heavy breathing around a singular soccer ball with five kids around it at the same time,” she explained.ae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb Walensky also clarified that children under the age of 12 could also take their masks off outdoors while in small groups. “What we really are trying to do is ensure that all of these kids can have a really good camp experience and keep the camps open without any outbreaks,” she said. And for more on when we might be able to move past the pandemic, America Will “Feel Close to Normal” by This Exact Date, COVID Expert Says. News of the change comes as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced that it is set to authorize the use of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine in adolescents aged 12 to 15 in the coming days. Results of a recent trial released in March found the shots to potentially be even more effective in the younger cohort than in adults, The New York Times reported. “We are prepared to move as quickly as we can after any kind of authorization,” Andy Slavitt, COVID-19 adviser to the White House, said May 5. “We know that kids want to go to camp this summer. We know that parents want them to be safe. If they want that done without masks, vaccinations are the best answer.” And for more useful information delivered straight to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter.
The change also comes after critics took issue with the summer camp guidelines, with one calling them “unfairly draconian” for children. During a May 5 appearance on the Today show, Anthony Fauci, MD, chief White House COVID adviser, clarified his feelings on the CDC guidance for camps, telling anchor Savannah Guthrie: “I wouldn’t call them excessive, but they certainly are conservative.” He went on to add, “I think what you’re going to start to see is really in real-time, continually reevaluating that for its practicality. Because you’re right, people look at that, and they say, ‘Well, is that being a little bit too far right now?’” But even before news of the change came about, Fauci explained to Guthrie that the agency’s process was rooted in research. “The CDC makes decisions based on science. They will continually reevaluate that,” Fauci said. “You’re right, it looks a bit strict, a bit stringent, but that’s the reason why they keep looking at that and trying to reevaluate literally in real-time whether or not that’s the practical way to go.” And for more on where you shouldn’t go, Dr. Fauci Just Said to Avoid This One Place, Even If You’re Vaccinated.