• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Era Of Kashmir

Weekly Newspaper

  • Home
  • J&K
  • India
  • Opinion
  • Editorial
  • Columns
  • SOCIETY
  • Tourism
  • Education
  • e Paper
Home » Should children wear a mask during COVID-19?

Should children wear a mask during COVID-19?

WHO advises that people always consult and abide by local authorities on recommended practices in their area. An international and multidisciplinary expert group brought together by WHO reviewed evidence on COVID-19 disease and transmission in children and the limited available evidence on the use of masks by children.
Based on this and other factors such as childrens’ psychosocial needs and developmental milestones, WHO and UNICEF advise the following:
Children aged 5 years and under should not be required to wear masks. This is based on the safety and overall interest of the child and the capacity to appropriately use a mask with minimal assistance.
WHO and UNICEF advise that the decision to use masks for children aged 6-11 should be based on the following factors:

Whether there is widespread transmission in the area where the child resides

The ability of the child to safely and appropriately use a mask

Access to masks, as well as laundering and replacement of masks in certain settings (such as schools and childcare services)

Adequate adult supervision and instructions to the child on how to put on, take off and safely wear masks

Potential impact of wearing a mask on learning and psychosocial development, in consultation with teachers, parents/caregivers and/or medical providers

Specific settings and interactions the child has with other people who are at high risk of developing serious illness, such as the elderly and those with other underlying health conditions

WHO and UNICEF advise that children aged 12 and over should wear a mask under the same conditions as adults, in particular when they cannot guarantee at least a 1-metre distance from others and there is widespread transmission in the area.

Filed Under: Education Published on June 10, 2021

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Latest ePaper

Cover Stories

Champions at Last

Champions at Last

Published on March 4, 2026

How Jammu and Kashmir Conquered the Ranji Trophy and Rewrote Sporting History The afternoon sun baked the red soil of the KSCA Rajnagar Stadium in Hubballi as the final moments of India’s premier domestic cricket competition ticked away. For eight-time champions Karnataka, the fifth and final day was a grueling exercise in inevitability. For the […]

  • Slopes of Unity
  • A Valley Under Diagnosis
  • J&K: North India’s New Medical Hub
  • The Voltage Crisis
  • J&K Budget 2026: J&K Govt Announces Free LPG, Fee Waivers, and Jobs for the Poor
  • Budget Session: LG Unveils Roadmap for a Prosperous J&K
  • 77th Republic Day, J&K Redefines “Integration” Through Rail, Road, and Resolve
  • The Silent Ebb
  • Cloud, Code, and Connectivity
  • Year 2025: How J&K Moved Forward

More Posts from this Category

Education

Redefining Achievement in the Wake of the Winter Session

Published on March 5, 2026

A look back at the January results that shook the Valley, from the record-breaking speed of JKBOSE to the high cost of academic pressure. By Rayees Ahmad Kumar The transition of Jammu and Kashmir’s academic landscape into the 2026 calendar year was marked by a logistical feat that has since become the primary talking point […]

  • A Review of Majeed Masroor’s ‘Faizan-e-Nazar
  • The Dilemma of First Standard Admissions
  • Kashmir’s Pet Boom Demands Responsibility
  • Echoes of the Valley
  • Kupwara Revives Kashmir’s Poetic Tradition

Footer

About Us

Contact Us

e Paper

© 2005–2026 Era Of Kashmir