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Former Surgeon General Says CDC's Relaxing Of Mask Guidance Is Premature

Former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams.
Office of the Surgeon General
Former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams.

Former United States Surgeon General and Indiana state health commissioner Dr. Jerome Adams said the CDC’s easing of mask restrictions is premature.

Last year, he and Dr. Anthony Fauci announced masks would not be effective in preventing spread of COVID-19, before rescending that advice after further study.

Adams said given the rising positivity rates in some areas and spread of the delta variant, the science backing the CDC’s recommendations has changed and new, stricter masking policies should be reissued.



What Dr. Fauci and I said was based on the science & conditions at the time, and amounted to “save the medical masks (which were all that was available) for the medical workers.”

Both the conditions & the science changed, but what people heard and held to was masks don’t work…


— Jerome Adams (@JeromeAdamsMD) July 17, 2021

The delta variant now makes up more than half of new COVID-19 cases in the U.S., according to the CDC.

After a lull in new daily reported cases across the U.S. in June, numbers have started to trend upward again since the end of last month.

And states with lower vaccination numbers were more likely to see jumps in COVID-19 cases this month.

Nearly 2.9 million Hoosiers are now fully vaccinated. Indiana’s seven-day all-test positivity rate has been rising since June 22’s low of 1.9 percent, hitting 4.8 percent on Monday. The positivity rate hasn’t been that high since May 23.

The delta variant made up more than 74 percent of COVID-19 samples tested in Indiana as of Monday.

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