U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Rochelle Walensky issued a clarification on the COVID-19 “Delta” variant, proclaiming that fully vaccinated individuals are protected against the strain and don’t need to wear masks.
Walensky, however, said the CDC’s recommendation on wearing masks in public hasn’t changed.
“If you are vaccinated, you are safe from the variants that are circulating here in the United States,” Walensky told NBC’s “Today” show, adding that it was “exactly right” that the agency’s guidance still stipulates that vaccinated individuals don’t need to wear masks.
In the case of WHO’s guidance, Walensky said, the U.N. health organization is dealing with COVID-19 on a larger scale than the United States, which has a relatively high vaccination rate.
“We know that the WHO has to make guidelines and provide information to the world,” Walensky said. “Right now we know as we look across the globe that less than 15 percent of people around the world have been vaccinated, and many people of those have really only received one dose of a two-dose vaccine. There are places around the world that are surging.”
In response to Los Angeles County issuing recommendations on wearing masks, she didn’t make any specific comments.
“We have always said that local policymakers need to make policies for their local environment,” the CDC director said.
The media coverage on health officials’ announcements about the Delta strain, meanwhile, has prompted harsh words from lockdown critics.
Walensky noted in the interview that there is “less data” on how the Johnson & Johnson vaccine performs against the Delta variant. “Right now we have no information to suggest that you need a second shot after J&J, even with the Delta variant.”