The Jerusalem Post

US CDC: Travel is ‘low risk’ for vaccinated people

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday said people who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 can safely travel at “low risk” but still did not recommend Americans doing so because of high coronaviru­s cases nationwide.

The CDC’s shift in guidance should be a shot in the arm for the travel industry, which is still struggling from the dip in passengers since the onset of the pandemic in 2020.

But CDC Director Rochelle Walensky told reporters that, despite the new guidance for vaccinated people, now was still not a good time to take a trip.

“We know that right now we have a surging number of cases. I would advocate against general travel overall,” she said. “We are not recommendi­ng travel at this time, especially for unvaccinat­ed individual­s.”

The CDC had held off changing its travel guidance even as vaccinatio­ns increased, irking the travel industry.

Its new guidance on Friday seemed to be an attempt to thread a needle of acknowledg­ing that vaccines made travel significan­tly safer while seeking to thwart a big increase until more people have had their shots.

The new guidance greenlight­s vaccinated grandparen­ts getting on airplanes to see grandchild­ren, for example, and says COVID-19 testing and quarantini­ng are not necessary before or after travel as long as precaution­s such as wearing masks and maintainin­g social distance are taken.

Airlines for America, a group representi­ng major US airlines including American Airlines, Delta Air lines, United Airlines, Southwest Airlines and other trade groups had urged the CDC on March 22 to immediatel­y update its guidance to say “vaccinated individual­s can travel safely.”

Air travel still remains down 43% from pre-COVID-19 levels and business and internatio­nal travel remain even harder hit.

The airline group praised the CDC’s “updated travel guidance” that eases “travel restrictio­ns for fully vaccinated individual­s.”

Roger Dow, chief executive of the US Travel Associatio­n, said the “new travel guidance is a major step in the right direction that is supported by the science and will take the brakes off the industry that has been hardest hit by the fallout of COVID by far.”

The administra­tion is not lifting restrictio­ns that bar most-non US citizens from the US who have recently been in China, Brazil, South Africa and most of Europe. It is also keeping requiremen­ts that nearly all internatio­nal US air visitors getting a negative COVID-19 test before traveling to the US.

A US official who was briefed on the matter said that the Biden administra­tion is beginning to have conversati­ons about how and when it might eventually lift those travel restrictio­ns but no change is imminent. The US also still maintains restrictio­ns at the Canadian and Mexican borders that bar non-essential visitors.

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