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Medicine

Fully Vaccinated Individuals Can Socialize Without Masks, Distancing, CDC Says (cdc.gov) 277

schwit1 writes: Americans who have received the full COVID-19 vaccine can gather with vaccinated grandparents or friends without wearing masks or keeping their distance, according to new CDC guidance announced Monday, and those grandparents can visit with and hug family members that aren't vaccinated as long as they don't have underlying medical conditions that put them at high risk for COVID-19. The new guidance also says that vaccinated individuals don't need to quarantine or get tested if they come in contact with someone positive for COVID-19 and don't have any symptoms.
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Fully Vaccinated Individuals Can Socialize Without Masks, Distancing, CDC Says

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  • Finally some sense... Since the vaccine came out they've been pushing that you still can't do anything, and have to mask up anyway... Now we're getting some common sense.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 08, 2021 @04:02PM (#61137610)
      No, common sense would say you weigh the risk/benefit and make a decision, or that you consider your impact on the continuing public health crisis, not that you take the CDC's guidance as some blank check.

      Vaccination undoubtedly removes the risk to an individual to an acceptable level. But in the case where plenty of vulnerable people remain unvaccinated, I think you still bear some responsibility not to be a vector.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Bodie1 ( 1347679 )

        The theory is immunized individuals who are exposed will not respond to the virus and start shedding it. This seems to be playing out in the immunized population. this loosening of the guidance will further test the theory as exposure likelihood goes up.

        • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 08, 2021 @04:41PM (#61137828)
          The data rather than the theory say that no vaccine is more than 95% effective in preventing symptomatic COVID-19 infection, with the J&J product as low as 66%. While asymptomatic carriers are less likely to transmit the virus- approximately 40% less likely- that figure is not zero. There have not been fully-vetted studies of the rate of asymptomatic infection among the vaccinated, but some pre-prints suggest it's roughly equal to the number that will show symptomatic infection.

          I think the answer's pretty clear: with so many rabid anti-vaxxers and people who believe that masks are some equivalent to quartering soldiers in their homes, responsible vaccinated people should continue to wear masks, avoid gatherings, etc. Yes, a vaccinated person no longer faces a risk of death or hospitalization, but plenty of people still do. That risk exists because the virus is still circulating, and if you're merely contributing 10% of your former participation in that circulation, maybe you only have to apologize for one out of every ten dead grandmas.
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by jriding ( 1076733 )

            Que all the people who refused to wear masks due to BS "medical reasons" to all of a sudden have been fully vaccinated. They will have not proof but something they printed at home saying I've been fully vaccinated.

            Stupid self righteous people will have this virus going for years along with opening and shutting our economy.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Common sense is a fine thing, as long as you understand its limitations.

      When dealing with the familiar it certainly feels like our gut has some kind of mystical connection to the truth, but that's actually just an non-verbal connection to our own past experience. Appealing to common sense on how to control a pandemic is like thinking you can land a fighter plane on an aircraft by common sense.

      What feels right to do is an absolutely worthless guide in this situation.

      • by Arethan ( 223197 )

        > thinking you can land a fighter plane on an aircraft by common sense

        So, a plane landing on a plane then? I know 'aircraft' could potentially mean several things, but I just don't see how we'll get fighter planes landing on helicopters or dirigible airships anytime soon. Oh shoot, there's my common sense.

    • This doesn't override state and city rules about masks in public places for those that are vaccinated. It just means that when vaccinated individuals are together they can be without a mask. Vaccinated people will still be required to wear a mask when they go out in public if their state or city rules require such.
      • This doesn't override state and city rules about masks in public places for those that are vaccinated.

        Those vary widely, so depends on where you live.

        Many states never had mask mandates...a couple more states this week are already dropping the mask mandates they did have, and more are soon to follow.

        I would imagine within a couple months, most of the US won't have mask mandates anymore as vaccination ramps up.

        At some point, likely this summer, the onus to protect oneself if not vaccinated, is on the per

    • by ljw1004 ( 764174 )

      Finally some sense... Since the vaccine came out they've been pushing that you still can't do anything, and have to mask up anyway... Now we're getting some common sense.

      The data so far indicates that vaccinated people have a 90% chance of serious illness from the virus, and a 85% lower chance of infecting people, i.e. 1/7th. But that was measured in a society (Scotland) where they were still subject to social-distancing mandates.

      If you relax the rules, and these vaccinated people don't social-distance, does their exposure increase? And if they're say 7x more exposed to the virus, will that cancel out their 1/7th lower chance of infecting others?

      I don't know. My common sens

      • vaccinated people have a 90% chance of serious illness from the virus

        There has to be something wrong with your statement. Can't put my finger on it.

        • by ljw1004 ( 764174 )

          vaccinated people have a 90% chance of serious illness from the virus

          There has to be something wrong with your statement. Can't put my finger on it.

          Sorry, missed the word "lower" in there. 90% lower chance of serious illness from the virus, and 85% lower chance of infecting people. The rest of my post remains unaffected by this mistype.

    • Considering that vaccinated people can be asymptomatic carriers, this makes NO sense. Sure allow them to mingle with other vaccinated people but they should not be going anywhere near non-vaccinated people.

    • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Monday March 08, 2021 @06:39PM (#61138404) Homepage Journal

      But note carefully the actual CDC guidance. It does not say you should be running around in public without a mask of participating in large gatherings.

      It DOES say that if everyone is vaccinated you can take your mask off and that you can safely enough visit a single unvaccinated household unmasked if nobody in the household is high risk.

      Of course we'll have people who have been "vaccinated" running about in public unmasked screeching that the CDC said so.

    • I will say that the only thing that I've read in the CDC guidance that was the questionable part was the hanging out with the elderly. The CDC for fully vaccinated people, has gone from "we're still looking at the data, so be careful" to "yeah, it's okay to head out" for the

      The new guidance of:

      The new guidance also says that vaccinated individuals don't need to quarantine or get tested if they come in contact with someone positive for COVID-19 and don't have any symptoms

      Is a clarification from the January publication that some local governments had brought up as a corner case that the CDC didn't clarify for.

      Since the vaccine came out they've been pushing that you still can't do anything, and have to mask up anyway

      I wouldn't take it as "pushing" they were issuing caution because they wer

    • by bizitch ( 546406 )

      Common sense and logic left the building so-to-speak over a year now

      Best not to apply common sense, logic or reason to anything Covid

  • Hopefully people can go in public without masks and not be stopped by local ordinance. Once vaccinated - you can go to the grocery store and not get kicked out without a mask.

    • by klipclop ( 6724090 ) on Monday March 08, 2021 @03:54PM (#61137564)
      I'll probably be wearing a mask when I'm in a big crown of random people. I'm actuality pretty certain that I caught all my colds and flu from public transit or mixing with the unwashed masses. I don't take transit anymore, and doubt I'll go to any event where I'm in a closed room with lots of people. Before the pandemic, I had a distain for sneeze and cough bags that don't have the common courtesy of staying home if they might have something.
      • I've had great luck with flu shots the last couple decades, before that got flu each year and once was really bad.

        As for "colds" (more than 200 different viruses) I find loading up on zinc at first sign keeps them short (vitamin C does nothing for me)

      • Interesting.

        I've never had a flu shot, and has been decades since I last had the flu [knocks wood]>

        Hey, everyone person and community is going to have to figure out their best path to "normal" again.

        Personally, I"m trying to get jabbed this week....and my great hope is, that the many food and music festivals that make the New Orleans area so great to live in, after 2 years off..WILL be able to open this Fall to where they are all pushed off till.

        I sorely miss this major part of our culture....and re

    • by crow ( 16139 ) on Monday March 08, 2021 @04:03PM (#61137616) Homepage Journal

      If we could trust people to be honest about whether they were vaccinated, then that would work. But we all know that people who just don't want to wear a mask would lie and skip them, so we're stuck with them.

      Besides, we still really need them now until we have more solid data on how effective the vaccines are on all the variants, and even then there's always the risk of a new one.

    • Hopefully people can go in public without masks and not be stopped by local ordinance. Once vaccinated - you can go to the grocery store and not get kicked out without a mask.

      They aren't kicking people out without masks now where I'm live... I assume the sign is just up for liability reasons.

      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        In Seattle they don't necessarily kick them out, because they don't let them in to start with. Even the cart guys at Target will remind people in the parking lot that they have to wear a mask or they can't enter the store. Fortunately people around here tend to be more reasonable than those in the Stupid States, one of th reasons why we have one of the lowest deaths/million in the country in spite of having the first fatalities.

      • They are kicking people out where I live. It is a state mandate to wear masks. Some places have guards at the doors forbidding people to enter without a mask. This is not a store policy, but a state mandate.

    • by dbialac ( 320955 )
      IMO, it's better to continue to do so. We don't know if these vaccines stop you from spreading, and you just invite anti-maskers to go around grocery stores potentially spreading COVID.
      • by xanthos ( 73578 )

        IMO, it's better to continue to do so. We don't know if these vaccines stop you from spreading, and you just invite anti-maskers to go around grocery stores potentially spreading COVID.

        This plus there is no guaranty that your own vaccination will be effective against all variants. The results so far have been good which led to this announcement. Even though I got my shots I plan on wearing a mask when I am around people who may or may not have gotten their shots yet. Lost three relatives and know people who can't taste bacon anymore. Don't want to be dead and I like my BLTs.

        • At what point do you think we should stop wearing masks?

          • It's really pretty simple. When the risk of transmission is no longer statistically significant. We're at about 9% in the US being fully vaccinated. Maybe most of another year unless things can really get ramped up (and people are keeping the vaccine bookings at full capacity and there are no supply issues).

            But I imagine that outdoor public events with masks - even large gatherings - will become safe again much sooner, since the overall viral load of the surrounding air will drop greatly. Without masks,

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      This is one of those Bayesian situations where you have to take numerical context into account to estimate the likely outcomes of your actions. Vaccinated people going to the grocery store may be fine in one circumstance and not fine in another.

      Remember -- the vaccine does not reliably prevent you from getting just *enough* of an infection to vector the virus from an infected person to an uninfected one. The likelihood of that happening is not just a function of your being vaccinated, but also of your pr

    • Not yet anyway, keep wearing the mask in public even if vaccinated. But the stores can always kick you out for any reason as long as it's applied consistently to all customers (ie, they can't kick you out for being a member of a protected class). "No shoes, no shirt, no service!" If a store can require you to wear a shirt (or pants!) then it can require you to wear a mask.

    • Once vaccinated - you can go to the grocery store and not get kicked out without a mask.

      Yes, you can if the store says you have to wear a mask to shop. It's just like no shirt, no shoes, no service. It's their property and they set the rules.

    • Prove you're vaccinated and not just being an ass.

      • I don't know if that was directed toward me, but I said once vaccinated. I am way down on the list of people who can get vaccinated so it will be a while.

    • Once vaccinated - you can go to the grocery store and not get kicked out without a mask.

      I think you'll find the idea of a store asking you for your papers to be far more offensive than a store asking you to wear a mask, so no it's unlikely that a vaccine will mean you just get to go into a store mask free.

  • You know, (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 )

    if they had given any different answer, they'd face an angry mob. [wikipedia.org] You'd get a lot of "why are we doing all this shit then!"

    • Were people expecting a change in mandates? Why do you think that there would be another angry mob?

      There is not a pattern of people storming the capitol building so maybe you shouldn't try to act like there is one.

  • by NotARealUser ( 4083383 ) on Monday March 08, 2021 @04:00PM (#61137588)
    I have a relative that was tested by the Red Cross to have antibodies a couple months after having COVID. I assume that would also qualify her to be without a mask given that her body has the necessary defense mechanisms?
    • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

      Given there are confirmed cases of people getting infected a second time, I would keep wearing a mask even if I had COVID previously

      • Given there are confirmed cases of people getting infected a second time, I would keep wearing a mask even if I had COVID previously

        There are also confirmed cases of people getting COVID after the vaccine. Indeed very high quality peer reviewed studies - for the Oxford/AstraZeneca it is about ~30% for the mRNA ones its closer to ~5%. Yet, the CDC still thinks that's enough protection to let them lose on society.

        It actually would make a lot of sense to afford people who have had the virus the same level of freedoms. We don't have enough vaccine anyway, and in some areas this might be up to 20-30% of people. That is going to make reaching

        • There's a difference between designed immune response and what your body concocts while getting sick. You realise this isn't an 80s era vaccine where you're being injected with the actual virus right?

          Drawing any parallels between the COVID vaccine and antibodies you may have due to having contracted COVID is completely pointless.

    • Depends on which part of the virus their immune system is fighting. We know with the mRNA vaccines it's the spike proteins that are targeted by any antibodies that results. Because that's the only part of the virus structure your body sees from the shot. Antibodies from an infection in the wild is a lot less targeted and may not fight off every strain equally.

    • I assume that would also qualify her to be without a mask given that her body has the necessary defense mechanisms?

      Don't assume. There's a difference between having a bunch of antibodies due to catching a virus and being inoculated. For one the antibodies fade after only a couple of months and we've had plenty confirmed cases of reinfection.

  • Not good (Score:5, Insightful)

    by dicobalt ( 1536225 ) on Monday March 08, 2021 @04:00PM (#61137600)
    People will falsely claim they have the vaccine and use this as a way to get around mask wearing.
    • People will falsely claim they have the vaccine and use this as a way to get around mask wearing.

      So wear a KN-95 mask when you're out in public, at least until you've gotten the vaccine. They are reasonably inexpensive now [amazon.com].

      Also, given that these viruses don't survive for long on surfaces - you can reuse them, for as long as they hold up intact, in a two or three mask rotation. Not to mention that surface transmission is not thought to be a significant factor anyway...

    • People will falsely claim they have the vaccine and use this as a way to get around mask wearing.

      To fool their grandparents? Or their grandparents would be the ones lying to be able to see their grandchildren? Honestly, if they were going to do that they probably were already gathering.

    • People will falsely claim they have the vaccine and use this as a way to get around mask wearing.

      That's fine. Show your papers. I wonder if people will find that less offensive than simply wearing a mask.

    • by bizitch ( 546406 )

      You're are correct.

      Especially when this is all it takes to prove you are "vaccinated"

      https://www.google.com/search?... [google.com]

      I mean - who could possibly copy that?

    • I've been volunteering at local vaccination events in my community. One thing that has changed in the last six weeks is that the people running them are being much more careful with the vaccination cards. So apparently there is some concern that people will steal them to make fake ones, and apparently there is already an industry selling fake vaccination cards :(.

  • That's stupid. Fully Vaccinated Individuals Can Still Spread The Virus. Why would you let people who are almost guaranteed to not know if they're spreading the virus.... to go ahead and walk around brazen with this new authority.
    • by dbialac ( 320955 )

      Fully Vaccinated Individuals Can Still Spread The Virus.

      Minus the AZ vaccine, we have no idea if this is the case or not, one way or another. The AZ vaccine reduced the amount you transmitted by 75%. While that sounds like a lot, going from spewing 500,000 viruses to 125,000 viruses is still a lot.

  • Let's not overlook.. (Score:5, Informative)

    by lionchild ( 581331 ) on Monday March 08, 2021 @04:39PM (#61137818) Journal

    While we're applying "common sense" here, let's not overlook a key point they have on the same page of the site:

    For now, fully vaccinated people should continue to:
              o Take precautions in public like wearing a well-fitted mask and physical distancing

  • Still around 43rd country for vaccination, just above Russia and Brazil.
    We are going to be lagging the USA by months.

The only possible interpretation of any research whatever in the `social sciences' is: some do, some don't. -- Ernest Rutherford

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