Governor Pritzker Announces NEW COVID-19 Vaccine and Mask Requirements
Office of the Governor
Thursday, August 26, 2021
CONTACT
Gov.Press@illinois.gov
Governor
Pritzker Announces COVID-19 Vaccine Requirement for Healthcare Workers,
Pre-K-12 Teachers and Staff,
Higher
Education Personnel and Students to Slow Spread of Delta Variant
All
Illinois Residents Required to Wear Masks Indoors, Regardless of Vaccination
Status
Downstate
Communities with Lower Vaccination Rates Experiencing Sharp Increase in
COVID-19 Hospitalizations
CHICAGO – As COVID-19
infection and hospitalization rates across the state continue to increase,
particularly in downstate communities with the lowest vaccination rates,
Governor JB Pritzker and IDPH Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike today announced
vaccination requirements for individuals in high risk settings. All healthcare
workers, including nursing home employees, all pre-k-12 teachers and staff, as
well as higher education personnel and students will now be required to receive
the COVID-19 vaccine. Employees in all of these settings and higher
education students who are unable or unwilling to receive the vaccine will be
required to get tested for COVID-19 at least once per week, and DPH and ISBE
may require increased testing in certain situations.
The Governor and Dr. Ezike also announced a
statewide indoor mask mandate for all Illinois residents, regardless of
vaccination status, as COVID-19 cases and hospitalization rates continue to
increase. The masking requirements are effective Monday, August 30th.
The public health requirements come as regions
with low vaccination rates continue to see a surge of COVID-19
hospitalizations. In IDPH region 5, Southern Illinois, with the lowest
vaccination rate in the state at 44 percent, only 3% of ICU beds are available
as the region experiences the highest case rate in the state. Since August 1st,
local health departments across the state have reported 27 COVID-19 outbreaks
at schools and currently hundreds of schools are being monitored for potential
COVID-19 exposures.
“The quick spread of this disease in Illinois and
across the country is holding us all back from the post-pandemic life we so
desperately want to embrace, and it’s harming the most vulnerable among us,” said
Governor JB Pritzker. “We are running out of time as our hospitals run out
of beds. Vaccination remains our strongest tool to protect ourselves and our
loved ones, to restore post-pandemic life to our communities, and most
crucially, to maintain our healthcare system’s ability to care for anyone who
walks through their doors in need of help – and Illinois is taking action to
keep our communities safe.”
“Unlike the wave of COVID-19 we saw earlier
this Spring, we’re now seeing our hospital resources stretched thin with some
areas of Illinois reduced to only a handful of available ICU beds,” said
IDPH Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike. “The vast majority of hospitalizations, as
well as cases and deaths, are among those who are unvaccinated. This has
become a pandemic of the unvaccinated. We have safe, proven, and effective
tools to turn the tide and end this pandemic. But until more people are
vaccinated, masks are the order of the day and will help us slow the spread of
the virus.”
COVID-19
Vaccination
From the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, the
Pritzker administration has implemented policies and guidelines in accordance
with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to slow the spread of
the virus and protect the health and safety of residents. With the Delta
variant causing a rapid increase in infection rates across the state and nation
and downstate hospitals in Illinois approaching capacity for hospital and ICU
beds, employees in high risk settings will now be required to receive the
vaccine or be subject to routine testing. Earlier this month, the
administration announced that employees at all State-run congregate facilities
would be required to be vaccinated.
To lower the number of breakthrough cases that
require hospital admission, the majority of whom are 65 and over or
immunocompromised, all healthcare workers, including workers at public and
private nursing homes, must get vaccinated. Teachers and staff at pre-k-12
schools as well as personnel and students at higher education institutions are
required to receive the vaccine. Workers and students in applicable settings
must receive the first dose of a two-dose vaccination series or a single-dose
vaccination by September 5, 2021. Second doses of the vaccine must be received
by 30 days after the first dose.
Workers who do not receive the vaccine or those
who opt out for medical reasons or based on a sincerely held religious belief
must follow a routine testing schedule to detect cases early and prevent
further spread. Testing will be required a minimum of once per week in schools
and healthcare facilities. The frequency of testing may be required to increase
in the event of positive cases.
Healthcare, school workers, and higher education
personnel and students attending in-person classes who do not provide proof of
vaccination will be prevented from entering healthcare and educational
facilities unless they follow the required testing protocol.
The COVID-19 vaccine has been available for
healthcare and nursing home workers since December 15, 2020, and open to
teachers since January 25, 2021. To increase ease of access for all residents,
the Pritzker administration established 25 mass vaccination sites across the
state that were run by members of the Illinois National Guard (ILNG) who
administered 1,869,755 shots to residents across the state. Additionally, teams
of ILNG members supported over 800 mobile vaccination clinics across the state
on top of an additional 1,705 state-supported mobile sites that focused on
communities hardest hit by the pandemic, young residents, and rural communities.
The administration
also launched vaccination clinics in communities experiencing high case rates.
Clinics were set up in central locations within communities including schools
and houses of worship and were also present at community events and, most
recently, the Illinois State Fair and upcoming Du Quoin Fair.
Building on these efforts to make access to the
COVID-19 vaccine equitable and easy, the administration has offered support to
every school district in the State in the form of free mobile vaccination
events. So far, the administration has hosted 138 school-focused event with
another 163 scheduled for the coming days and weeks.
Mask
Requirement
To slow the spread of the highly
transmissible COVID-19 Delta variant, all Illinois residents over the age of
two will be required to wear a mask in all indoor settings, effective Monday,
August 30th. The requirement is applicable to both vaccinated and unvaccinated
residents statewide. Countless studies have demonstrated the efficacy of masks
at preventing the spread of COVID-19, with the CDC identifying at least 10 that confirm the benefit of
universal masking via community level analyses – including two U.S. states – in
addition to observational, economic, epidemiological, and cross-sectional
survey studies. A small sampling can be found below:
- “Community Use of Face Masks And
COVID-19: Evidence From A Natural Experiment of State Mandates In The US”
found an estimated overall initial daily decline in new diagnoses of 0.9%
grew to 2.0% at 21 days following mandates.
- “Trends in County-Level COVID-19
Incidence in Counties With and Without a Mask Mandate — Kansas, June
1–August 23, 2020” studied a Kansas executive
order requiring mask wearing in public spaces from which county
authorities could opt out. The estimated case rate per 100,000 decreased
by 0.08 in counties with mask mandates but increased by .11 in those
without.
- “Association of Country-wide
Coronavirus Mortality with Demographics, Testing, Lockdowns, and Public
Wearing of Masks” evaluated 169 countries on
per-capita mortality on potential predictors including age, gender,
obesity prevalence, temperature, urbanization, smoking, duration of the
outbreak, lockdowns, viral testing, contact-tracing policies, and public
mask-wearing norms and policies. Duration of mask wearing by the public
was negatively associated with per-capita mortality from COVID-19.
While face coverings are not required
outdoors, masks are strongly encouraged in crowded outdoor settings like
festivals and concerts as well as for activities that require close contact
with people who are not vaccinated.
These latest vaccine, testing, and mask
requirements are a floor in the state’s efforts to prevent the spread of
COVID-19. Employers, schools, and other organizations can take additional
health and safety steps to help bring an end to the ongoing pandemic. Governor
Pritzker previously announced more stringent requirements regarding vaccination
and testing for state employees at state run 24-7 congregate living facilities
to protect the state’s most vulnerable residents. Leaders in the private sector
are encouraged to follow suit.
Vaccination is the key to ending the COVID-19
pandemic and returning to normal life. All Illinois residents over the age of
12 are eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine at no cost and proof of
immigration status is not required to receive the vaccine. To find a
vaccination center near you, go to vaccines.gov.
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