The last 14 months have been rough on everyone, including parents. As a single mom to an active 5-year-old boy — with no childcare and a full-time job— it’s been a hazy, difficult year. And now, here we are approaching summer 2021. I’m fully vaccinated, as are all the adults in my close circle.
But with the vaccine only approved and available for children ages 12 and over, it puts parents with little ones in a difficult spot.
The questions dangle like a poorly worn N95 mask. The CDC now says I don’t have to mask or physically distance except required by law. Infectious disease expert Dr. Michael Osterholm says I can party hard, but what about my kid? Can he party a little? Is it safe to bring him to our planned family reunion with other unvaccinated cousins? Am I setting a bad example for my child if I’m unmasked at the playground, or if I drink an iced coffee while we stroll down the street?
I asked three top doctors some of those burning questions. Dr. Kavita Patel is a physician in Washington, D.C. and a former health policy director under President Obama. Dr. Vin Gupta is a critical care pulmonologist and affiliate associate professor of Health Metrics Sciences at the University of Washington. And Dr. Lucy McBride is an internist in Washington, D.C. and a Bloomberg New Voices Fellow who is an advocate for incorporating mental health into the care of physical health.
Here’s what they said:
Q: What’s the risk for masked kids under 12 to enter stores or restaurants with unmasked, unvaccinated people?
Dr. Gupta: The risk of Covid-19 to younger kiddos in most public places is VERY low. That changes if the variants (particularly the one circulating in Brazil) starts to dominate here, but I still think we’re very much in a place where risk remains minimal to kids. That said, for now, we still mask our 4-year-old in public.
Q: As role models for our kids, should we keep masking if our children aren’t old enough to be vaccinated yet?
Dr. Patel: Yes. In my opinion, masks are a minimal trouble, and “do as I say, not as I do” is confusing to kids. Besides, until more adults are vaccinated, masks are our best defense.
Dr. Gupta: I mask up when I’m with my kid in when I’m in public for that exact reason. If they’re masking at school events, soccer practice or in indoor settings, I’d recommend that parents do so as well.
Dr. McBride: From a purely medical standpoint, vaccinated people do not need to mask, indoors or outdoors. But some people may opt to mask because they are not quite ready to relinquish that sense of safety, they want to role-model for their kids, or they want to be respectful of people who have not yet gotten vaccinated and might feel vulnerable. Parents need to role model confidence and optimism about the end of the pandemic. Masking outdoors — even for unvaccinated people — can end now.
Q: What’s the latest on Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children (MIS-C)? How worried should I be?
Dr. Patel: Parents should not be as worried about MIS-C, especially as we see total cases dropping. We know much more about how it presents and how to manage it in the hospital than we did a year ago.
Dr. Gupta: MIS-C is extremely rare. I would not be worried. A few thousand cases out of likely tens of millions of kiddos that have either tested positive or are positive (and just weren’t tested). There’s helpful info here on demographic risks.
Q: Regarding summer travel — What do you advise for plane travel with kids under 12? Should they test/mask when they arrive to grandparents’ homes?
Dr. Gupta: If grandparents are vaccinated, particularly with U.S.-based vaccines, the risk of exposure to Covid from a child that may have acquired in flight is very low to nil. I’d continue to mask children (and yourselves) in flight for now, but I would not recommend masking or testing on arrival.









