No threshold given for universal masking
Since the start of school in September, members of Families for COVID Safety have been advocating for stronger safety policies in Boston Public Schools, calling for at least 10 days of masking following the Thanksgiving and Christmas holiday breaks.
FamCOSa members were heartened in early November when the New England Journal of Medicine published a research paper that found that BPS officials’ decision to keep masking policies in place in 2021 led to infection rates lower than in surrounding communities such as Cambridge and Newton that made masking optional.
Yet on Nov. 17 when the group met with representatives from BPS and the Boston Public Health Commission, BPS Senior Advisor Megan Costello said masking would not happen.
“Megan
Costello said the data did not suggest masking would be recommended,”
said FamCOSa member Suleika Soto, a co-director of the Boston Education
Justice Alliance.
But a
BPHC representative told the activists the agency recommends masking 10
days after the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays, said Soto and
another person who was at the meeting.
“I
asked, ‘You say you’re following the recommendations of the Boston
Public Health Commission. Why are you not following that?’” Soto said.
BPS officials sent a statement on its masking policy to the Banner.
“Masking
has been and will continue to be a critical component of our health and
safety protocols, along with access to COVID-19 testing, efforts to
vaccinate eligible students and staff, and the work to promote
ventilation in school buildings,” the statement reads in part.
While
the statement notes that masking is strongly recommended if three or
more cases are detected in a classroom, BPS officials have not said
whether there is a community infection rate at which universal masking
would be made mandatory.
“How
can they say it’s data-driven?” Soto said. “What data are they
following? What exactly is an outbreak? There’s no clear process.”
City
Councilor Julia Mejia, who backs FamCOSa’s call for masking following
the holidays, said she would have preferred to see BPS take a more
proactive approach to preventing COVID spread.
“The
concern I have is that if we’re waiting to see that happens before we
institute a policy, we’ll be behind the eight-ball,” she said. “I fear
it could be a situation where we’re going so see a spike because we
didn’t take the necessary steps to contain it.”
Sarah
Horsley, a FamCOSa member who was at the meeting with BPS and BPHC,
said the rise in flu and Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) this year
makes masking an even greater imperative.
“We have right now a ‘triple-demic,’” she said. “Three-quarters of BPS schools don’t have mechanical ventilation.”
In addition to universal masking, FamCOSa members are calling for the reintroduction of pool testing for the coronavirus.
“We need to have a better sense of how many cases there are,” Horsley said.
Currently, BPS distributes athome tests, but is not doing pool testing in schools.
Soto said the district’s overall approach to stopping the spread of COVID doesn’t inspire confidence.
“I feel like they’re being reactive,” she said. “They’re waiting for something to happen before they take action.”
The
study that appeared in the New England Journal of Medicine was
conducted by Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Massachusetts
General Hospital, the Boston University School of Public Health and
BPHC. It compared COVID cases in Boston and Chelsea — two districts that
kept masking in place — with those in 70 other districts. The lifting
of mask mandates was associated with an additional 44.9 COVID cases per
1,000 students and school staff during a 15- week period.