Mask up indoors in Los Angeles and Las Vegas – even if you're vaccinated, officials say

Health officials from popular tourist destinations such as Los Angeles and Las Vegas are asking people to mask up indoors.

The Southern Nevada Health District recommends people wear masks in crowded indoor public places – including Las Vegas casinos – regardless of vaccination status, according to a statement Friday.

Thursday, Los Angeles County announced that it would reinstate an indoor masking policy in response to a surge in COVID-19 cases. More counties in California followed with mask recommendations Friday.

The mask guidelines are meant to help quell the spread of COVID-19 and the highly contagious delta variant, which has caused an uptick in daily cases in some regions.

Mask mandate: Los Angeles County to require masks indoors – regardless of COVID-19 vaccination status

Why did masking recommendations change?

The Southern Nevada Health District said, “Using masks correctly has proven to be effective in helping to prevent people from getting and spreading COVID-19.”

Eight areas in California – the counties of Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara and Sonoma and the city of Berkeley – recommended on Friday that both vaccinated and unvaccinated people wear masks indoors in public spaces.

The guidance is a precaution for those fully vaccinated and meant “to ensure easy verification that all unvaccinated people are masked in those settings,” according to a joint statement.

The daily COVID-19 case count has climbed in Nevada and California in recent weeks.

California reported 4,651 new cases – 5.4 per 100,000 people – on Friday, according to the state’s website. About 52% of people are fully vaccinated in the state.

Daily cases in Southern Nevada – where the delta variant is the dominant strain – returned to levels not seen since February. More than half of the state’s eligible population is not fully vaccinated.

Clark County – home of the Las Vegas Strip – accounts for nearly 78% of COVID-19 cases in the state, as well as the highest incidence rate.

New mask recommendations are meant to help quell the spread of the delta variant, which has caused an uptick of daily cases in various regions.
New mask recommendations are meant to help quell the spread of the delta variant, which has caused an uptick of daily cases in various regions.

Brian Labus, an epidemiologist at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said the Southern Nevada Health Department is trying to combat the spread of the highly transmissible delta variant.

“Our numbers are trending in the wrong direction,” Labus said. “Our recommendations have to change to match what the virus is doing.”

COVID-19 and travel: The delta variant is spreading. Should travelers be concerned?

What does this mean for travelers?

Visitors may not heed Nevada health officials' advice.

“We don’t see very many people in public wearing masks (in Las Vegas) unfortunately," Labus said. “People have kind of rejected that guidance and are just not wearing masks, and I don’t know how much this recommendation will really change that.”

The Nevada Gaming Control Board has the authority to reimpose mask mandates on Las Vegas casinos but made no changes as of Friday. The board declined to comment.

Labus said health officials will need to consider political and economic consequences before reimposing restrictions or mask mandates.

Las Vegas Sands, which operates the Venetian on the Strip, said it would require vaccinated and unvaccinated staff to wear face masks while working in public indoor areas, but the resort does not require masks among guests.

MGM Resorts International, which runs the Bellagio and other Strip resorts, is "closely monitoring the situation" but did not change its masking policy Friday, according to spokesman Brian Ahern. MGM and Sands plan to post signs at public entrances sharing the new masking recommendation.

Dr. Hana Hakim, an associate member of the St. Jude Department of Infectious Diseases, said it's not clear whether more face masking policies will be implemented. That will depend on vaccination rates and more data on the prevalence of breakthrough infections, or COVID-19 cases in those fully vaccinated, she said.

"Understanding the impact of the delta variant on vaccine efficacy will be essential in the re-masking implementation decision," Hakim said via email. “For now, the critical message would be ‘get vaccinated.’”

Casino consultant Debi Nutton said she doesn’t expect the recommendation to curb the pent-up travel demand that's benefited Las Vegas.

“Right now, travel to Las Vegas is high,” she said. “I think our guests are comfortable. ... I don't know if this is going to have a huge impact."

Masking: Mask guidelines are confusing if you're vaccinated. Experts break down the details.

Delta variant: Delta variant makes up 10% of new COVID-19 cases in the USA. Should Americans be worried?

Contributing: Ed Komenda, Reno Gazette-Journal

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: COVID mask guidance: Los Angeles, Nevada ask people to mask up indoors