US Hospitals Reinstate Mask Mandates Amid COVID & Flu Surge


US Hospitals Reinstate Mask Mandates Amid COVID & Flu Surge

Numerous US state hospitals reimpose mask mandates amidst a new wave of COVID-19 cases propelled by the highly contagious JN.1 variant, alongside a resurgence of the flu.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in its latest update before Christmas stated that JN.1 has become the dominant variant in the US. The proportion of JN.1 viruses over the past 2 weeks was up sharply, rising from 15-29 percent to 39-50 percent, the CDC said in an update on December 22. The CDC said it is also seeing an increasing share of infections caused by JN.1 in travelers, wastewater, and most world regions. This prompted local officials in several states including New York, Illinois, California, North Carolina and Massachusetts to ask staff, patients and visitors to mask up.

Mask Mandate Extended in Los Angeles County

Officials at Los Angeles County and New York City ordered all staff and visitors at healthcare facilities to mask up, according to ABC 7.The mandate applies to anyone entering New York H+H hospitals, community health centers and nursing homes, the NYC public hospital system said in statement “As we’ve seen an increase in Covid, flu and RSV, this is really to protect our patients, staff and the community,” said Christopher Miller, spokesman for NYC Health + Hospitals.

“What we don’t want is staffing shortages, right? When we saw the Omicron wave in 2022, the biggest issues were not only people getting sick, but that we had a lot of frontline health workers, they were out with Covid,” New York City Health Commissioner Dr. Ashwin Vasan was quoted as saying to WABC TV. Vasan noted that mask mandates had resumed at all 11 of the city’s public hospitals, 30 health centres and five long-term care facilities.Rush University medical system in Chicago said on Tuesday that it was requiring “patients, visitors and staff to wear hospital-approved masks in some areas of the campus.

Advertisement

They include clinical waiting areas and patient registration.”Mask mandates will also protect patients from other respiratory diseases, like the flu and RSV, that are on the rise this winter. JN.1, classified as a variant of interest (VOI) by the World Health Organization (WHO) due to its rapid spread, is currently present in about 41 countries. It was first detected in Luxembourg in August.

JN.1 is similar to its parent BA.2.86, but has an additional mutation (L455S) in the spike protein, which has immune-evasion properties.The CDC said that JN.1’s continued growth suggests that the variant is either more transmissible or better at evading our immune systems than other circulating variants.However, it added that “it is too early to know whether or to what extent JN.1 will cause an increase in infections or hospitalizations”.

Source-IANS





Source link