A
spokesperson for New York City Health + Hospitals says workers in public
hospitals and city-run clinics who are not vaccinated will need to take weekly
COVID-19 tests beginning next month.
Mayor
Bill de Blasio is expected to make a formal announcement on Wednesday.
New
York’s seven-day positivity has grown to 1.72% There's an ongoing conversation
over the possibility of a return to mask-wearing as health officials continue
to push hard for vaccinations.
Health
officials fear the current spike in the city’s COVID-19 positivity rate may be
due to the highly contagious delta variant. City data shows more than 400
confirmed cases in the last seven days, a slight upward trend, though deaths
and hospitalizations are still decreasing.
According
to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky,
“The delta variant now represents 83% of sequenced cases. This is a dramatic
increase, up from 50% for the week of July 3. In some parts of the
country, the percentage is even higher, particularly in areas of low
vaccination rates."
As the
city looks forward to the upcoming start of the school year, the city's
universal policy on mask wearing for both vaccinated and unvaccinated children
has become a point of contention for some. The mayor said Tuesday that he's
also expecting to see a large vaccination push among students 12 and up before
September.
"I
think you're going to see a lot of parents whose kids were not in person in
school who are coming back into school in September who are going to feel very
natural about saying, ‘I want to get my kid vaccinated ahead of that.'"