The Union Democrat

CDC eases COVID-19 guidance for school desks

- By AMINA KHAN and HOWARD BLUME

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced an update to its coronaviru­s prevention guidelines Friday that reduces the minimum required physical distance in classrooms from 6 feet to 3 feet.

The recommenda­tion comes with several limitation­s, and does not apply to adults or to other shared spaces on school grounds. Still, even with a host of caveats, the change could make it easier for more children to return to in-person learning, experts said.

The 3-foot rule applies only in classrooms where mask use is universal. However, it can be safely implemente­d regardless of whether community transmissi­on is low, moderate, substantia­l or high, authoritie­s said.

And it carries an asterisk: The 6-foot rule stays in place for middle school and high school students whose communitie­s have a high rate of transmissi­on and where it’s not possible for students to remain in small cohorts with the same peers and staff in order to reduce the risk of viral spread. The reason, the CDC said, is that older students are more likely than younger children to be exposed to the SARS-COV-2 virus and spread it to others.

Outside of the classroom, the agency recommende­d that the 6-foot rule be followed in these settings:

• Between adults, and between adults and students, in school buildings

• In common areas, such as lobbies and auditorium­s

• In situations when masks can’t be worn, such as when eating

• During activities when increased exhalation occurs, such as singing, shouting, band practice, sports or exercise (these activities should be moved outdoors or to large, well-ventilated spaces wherever possible, the agency noted)

The recommenda­tion for 6 feet of physical distancing still holds in community settings outside the classroom, the CDC added.

The new advice closely follows a study of 537,336 students and 99,390 staff members in 251 Massachuse­tts school districts. After accounting for difference­s in infection rates in the community, researcher­s found that coronaviru­s case rates among both students and staff were essentiall­y the same in schools that adopted a 3-foot rule as in those that followed the 6-foot rule. Those findings were published last week in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.

“Lower physical distancing policies can be adopted in school settings with masking mandates without negatively impacting student or staff safety,” the study authors concluded.

Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the CDC, said the agency will continue to revise its guidance for schools to incorporat­e new scientific evidence as it emerges.

“Safe in-person instructio­n gives our kids access to critical social and mental health services that prepare them for the future, in addition to the education they need to succeed,” Walensky said in a statement. “These updated recommenda­tions provide the evidenceba­sed roadmap to help schools reopen safely, and remain open, for in-person instructio­n.”

Dr. Monica Gandhi, an infectious disease specialist at the University of California, San Francisco, praised the CDC’S move.

“I think it’s a great thing,” she said, pointing out that the World Health Organizati­on already recommends just 1 meter, or 3.28 feet, of physical distancing in general.

“Since the requiremen­t of the 6-foot distancing rule has been identified as a hindrance to school openings in some situations, this change by the CDC is a welcome one and will hopefully facilitate more school openings here in California,” Gandhi said.

Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, agreed that the change was “a good idea,” adding that he didn’t think aerosol transmissi­on was a major risk outside certain health care settings, or in situations where singing or vigorous exercise was taking place.

“This policy will have a major benefit in that it will allow inperson learning to resume more easily,” Adalja said. “In this country, for too long, we have harmed children by forbidding in person learning in our public schools despite the scientific evidence showing that this could be done safely.”

Requiring 6 feet of distance hasn’t stopped schools from reopening, but it has prevented some of them from offering a full-day schedule five days a week. That’s because a 6-foot distancing requiremen­t made it impossible to bring a full class of students into a standardsi­zed California classroom at the same time.

The complicati­ons caused by 6-foot distancing requiremen­ts were at the heart of a lawsuit filed in north San Diego County. The plaintiffs sought a full schedule for students rather than a hybrid schedule, which would have allowed students on campus for no more than half of their instructio­nal hours.

The judge overseeing that case issued a temporary restrainin­g order this week that barred the state from enforcing its distancing guidelines. State health authoritie­s had establishe­d a standard of four feet, but also allowed counties to require six feet of distancing, which is the policy in Los Angeles County.

For the time being, the state is not enforcing a distancing requiremen­t in schools but said counties remain free to do so, officials said. That also means counties are empowered to eliminate distancing requiremen­ts altogether as long as the temporary restrainin­g order remains in effect.

Randi Weingarten, who heads the American Federation of Teachers and is an important ally for President Joe Biden and his education team, expressed concern Friday that the new guidelines were driven more by political considerat­ions and logistics — a desire to fit more students into a classroom — than by settled science. But she toned down the more vehement objections she had made in previous days.

“While we hope the CDC is right, we will reserve judgment” until the union more fully reviews the research and the guidance, especially as it applies “in districts with high community spread and older buildings with ventilatio­n challenges,” Weingarten said in a statement.

“We have asked the CDC to include urban and under-resourced districts in future studies, something it has not yet done,” she added.

 ?? kevajefimi­ja / Getty Images ?? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday updated its school guidance to say that it “now recommends that, with universal masking, students should maintain a distance of at least 3 feet in classroom settings.”
kevajefimi­ja / Getty Images The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday updated its school guidance to say that it “now recommends that, with universal masking, students should maintain a distance of at least 3 feet in classroom settings.”

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