In Jackson county, for children ages 5-11 is a little over 16%. In nearby Josephine, Klamath and Curry counties, that number hovers at around 11%.
Jackson County Public Health Medical Director Leona O'Keefe says parents shouldn鈥檛 worry yet.
鈥淔ortunately with this long lead time with the masks coming off, families have the time to ask questions, talk to trusted medical providers and make a decision about vaccinating their children," O'Keefe says. "That鈥檚 the strongest thing that they can do to keep their children in school even if masks are not there.鈥
She also advises parents to use the next couple of months to have family discussions about mask-wearing.
鈥淏e thinking about whether you want your child to still wear a mask in school,鈥 says O鈥橩eefe. 鈥淛ust because the mask is not required, doesn鈥檛 mean your child can鈥檛 wear a mask.鈥
She says that one strategy for schools is student cohorting. It involves putting students into smaller groups that stay together throughout the day. That way, if a COVID infection occurs, only the small cohort has to quarantine, instead of the entire class.
The situation becomes more complicated with teachers. Earlier in the pandemic, unvaccinated teachers agreed to wear masks in exchange for being able to continue teaching, so it鈥檚 unclear how schools will proceed after the mandate is lifted.