Hospitals in at least four U.S. states have reinstated mask mandates amid a rise in cases of COVID-19, seasonal flu, and other respiratory illnesses.
Healthcare facilities in New York, California, Illinois, and Massachusetts have made masks mandatory among patients and providers.
On Wednesday, New York City Health Commissioner Dr. Ashwin Vasan told WABC TV that mask mandates had resumed at all 11 of the city’s public hospitals, 30 health centers, and five long-term care facilities.
“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, who were out with COVID,” Vasan told WABC.
The most recent weekly data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed more than 29,000 hospitalizations from COVID across the U.S. from Dec. 17-23, up more than 16% from the previous week. The CDC also reported more than 14,700 flu hospitalizations in that same period.
Mask mandates were political and cultural flashpoints during the COVID pandemic, sparking anger among those who bucked medical advice and felt masks did little to suppress the spread of the illness.
More than 1.1 million Americans have died from COVID-19, CDC figures show a greater rate than most other wealthy countries.
Rush University medical system in Chicago said on Tuesday that it required “patients, visitors, and staff to wear hospital-approved masks in some areas of the campus. They include clinical waiting areas and patient registration.”
Cook County Health, which encompasses Chicago, and Endeavor Health in the Chicago suburbs, last month started requiring masks again, after the Illinois Department of Public Health asked hospitals to step up mitigation efforts in several areas, including facility-wide masking.
In Massachusetts, Berkshire Health Systems began mandatory masking on Wednesday, according to a statement.
In California, Los Angeles County on Saturday reinstated masking at all licensed healthcare facilities, according to a county statement provided to the City News Service. The county’s health department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
— Reporting by Brad Brooks