Boston Herald

CDC redefines COVID-19 close contact

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NEW YORK — U.S. health officials Wednesday redefined what counts as close contact with someone with COVID-19 to include briefer but repeated encounters.

For months, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said close contact meant spending a solid 15 minutes within 6 feet of someone who tested positive for coronaviru­s. On Wednesday, the CDC changed it to a total of 15 minutes or more — so shorter but repeated contacts that add up to 15 minutes over a 24-hour period now count.

The CDC advises anyone who has been in close contact with a COVID-19 patient to quarantine for two weeks.

The change may prompt health department­s to do contact tracing in cases where an exposure might previously have been considered too brief, said Dr. William Schaffner, a Vanderbilt University infectious diseases expert.

It also serves notice that the coronaviru­s can spread more easily than many people realize, he added.

The definition change was triggered by a report on that case of a 20-year-old Vermont correction­al officer, who was diagnosed with a coronaviru­s infection in August. The guard, who wore a mask and goggles, had multiple brief encounters with six transferre­d prisoners before test results showed they were positive. At times, the prisoners wore masks, but there were encounters in cell doorways or in a recreation­al room where prisoners did not have them on, the report said.

An investigat­ion that reviewed video footage concluded the guard’s brief interactio­ns totaled 17 minutes during an 8-hour shift.

The report didn’t identify the prison but Vermont officials have said that in late July, six inmates tested positive when they arrived at the Marble Valley Correction­al Facility in Rutland.

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