Texas and Mississippi Governors’ Lifting of Mask Mandates Is a Gift to the Coronavirus

This is exactly what public health experts have warned against.

Bob Daemmrich/Zuma

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In a contradiction of federal guidance, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves announced Tuesday that their states will lift their respective mask mandates and allow businesses to operate at full capacity.

“I just announced Texas is OPEN 100%.” Abbott tweeted. “EVERYTHING.” Minutes later, Reeves posted a similar tweet: “Our hospitalizations and case numbers have plummeted, and the vaccine is being rapidly distributed. It is time!”

As I wrote last month, this is exactly what public health experts have warned against doing, given the possibility of a surge in cases driven by new coronavirus variants. While there is reason to be hopefulā€”vaccines are hereā€”now isn’t the time to let our guard down, they said. In fact, they told me, easing restrictions now could give the virus even more opportunity to accumulate dangerous mutations.

I talked to three experts: Joseph Fauver, a genomic epidemiologist and associate research scientist at the Yale School of Public Health, Sarah Otto, an evolutionary biologist and a professor in the Department of Zoology at the University of British Columbia, and John Swartzberg, a clinical professor emeritus specializing in infectious diseases and vaccinology at UC Berkeleyā€™s School of Public Health. They told me that relaxing restrictions now could seriously impede our progress in fighting the virus:

Even with a more transmissible virus, all three experts agree, hope is not lost. ā€œMy answer is to continue doing what we know works, which is wearing a mask, social distancing, not spending unmasked time indoors with people outside of your immediate household or your bubble, what have you,ā€ Fauver says.

ā€œMy view of it is that if we have more transmissible strains than the standard strains circulating now, it means that we need to double down on everything we do to prevent getting infected,ā€ Swartzberg says, echoing Fauver. For instance, Swartzberg says heā€™s considering going grocery shopping a little less often and combining trips to the pharmacy. ā€œYou just have to be upping the ante right now.ā€

Vaccinations are also key. The faster we vaccinate, the fewer chances these variants have to potentially spread and evolve. ā€œHow can we keep our vaccines working for longer?ā€ Otto says. ā€œWe can bring the case numbers down, give evolution less opportunity.ā€ Data is limited, but so far, it seems our vaccines are effective against the new variants, although possibly not to the same degree as with previous versions.

Federal officials have issued similar warnings. As Dr. Anthony Fauci explained on CBS’s Face the Nation Sunday, “Right now, as we are going down [in COVID cases] and plateauing is not the time to declare victoryā€”because we are not victorious yetā€¦particularly with the variants that are circulating in various parts of the country.” And on Friday, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said, “Things are tenuous. Now is not the time to relax restrictions.”

Texas’ policy change will go into effect next week. Mississippi’s goes into effect tomorrow. 

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Readers also told us to just give it to you straight when we need to ask for your support, and seeing how matter-of-factly explaining our inner workings, our challenges and finances, can bring more of you in has been a real silver lining. So our online membership lead, Brian, lays it all out for you in his personal, insider account (that literally puts his skin in the game!) of how urgent things are right now.

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