Respiratory illness levels in Illinois have risen from moderate to high, according to the state's health department, but what does that mean for masking and what should you know?
While several hospitals and health systems in the Chicago area have started implementing mask recommendations, there is no specific statewide mandate.
Still, the Illinois Department of Public Health on Tuesday urged healthcare facilities to "consider targeted steps to mitigate the circulation of seasonal illnesses," including measures like masking, amid an "early winter jump in hospital admissions."
“The New Year has arrived, and Illinois is experiencing the expected winter surge in seasonal respiratory illnesses,” IDPH Director Dr. Sameer Vohra said in a statement. “It is now more important than ever to use the many tools at our disposal to keep ourselves and our loved ones safe."
Vohra urged vaccinations for the viruses spreading most across the state -- flu, COVID and RSV -- but noted that "other effective tools to prevent exposure to respiratory illnesses include enhanced ventilation, good hand hygiene, and a well-fitting mask."
He reminded those with symptoms of a respiratory illness -- such as fever, runny nose, sore throat or cough -- should isolate to avoid spreading germs, or wear a well-fitting mask if they are unable to isolate.
Already this winter virus season, Illinois has recorded four pediatric deaths due to flu, COVID-19 and RSV, the health department reported.
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In December, multiple Illinois health systems implemented full or partial mask mandates due to the continuing uptick in respiratory infections across the state.
Rush University Medical Center, in a note on its website, said visitors and staff must wear hospital-approved masks in some areas, citing increased levels of COVID-19 and other respiratory illnesses, such as the flu and RSV.
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"Effective Dec. 2, 2024, Rush is requiring patients and visitors to wear hospital-approved masks when they are in clinical offices, waiting areas and patient registration," the hospital stated. "The policy coincides with the respiratory virus season, when the spread of flu, RSV and COVID-19 rises."
The above requirement took effect at all of the health system's hospitals - Rush University Medical Center, Rush Copley Medical Center and Rush Oak Park Hospital.
Other area health systems, such as Endeavor Health, required masks for visitors and patients experiencing respiratory symptoms, citing ongoing virus transmission, according to its website. University of Chicago Medicine, meanwhile, mandated staff members members wear masks for "all patient care and patient facing activities," according to a spokesman.
OSF St. Francis Medical Center said it was recommending both patients and visitors wear masks in its hospitals, hospice home and clinic. The healthcare group also said it would temporarily limit hospital and hospice home visitors to two adults per patient at a time, with certain exceptions.
The uptick in Illinois follows surges in flu and whooping cough cases across much of the country.
Dr. Whitney Lyn, a family medicine physician with Cook County Health, said the hospital admission rate typically picks up a week after the holidays, but this year, hospitals are already "bursting at the seams."
For those who contract an illness, there are effective anti-viral treatments available for COVID-19 and the flu, but they must be started quickly. Even with the nation experiencing a rise in illnesses and the holidays winding down, doctors insist it's not too late to get vaccinated.
Lyn said it's "really, really important" to consider getting vaccines to decrease your chances of becoming seriously ill.
"But what's really the important thing about it is [the] majority of these viruses that we are seeing do have vaccines that can either lessen the symptoms or don't have the symptoms at all," she stated. "The more people that we really get vaccinated for the flu, RSV, COVID, those are the things that are really going to decrease the transmission from person to person and not have your whole household sick."
While it takes about two weeks for vaccinations to provide their full level of protection, getting shots now will offer protection through the cold and flu season that lasts into the spring.
Anyone experiencing common respiratory symptoms - such as a cough, sneezing or a fever - should wear a mask anytime they are around others, doctors assert.
"...If you're having that cough, that sneezing, please wear a mask because you don't know what you have," Lyn said. "And if, you know, you have elderly people that you're around or people who are immunocompromised that have chronic diseases or even children, those things can actually make things worse for them."