Greenwich Time

Ten day COVID isolation is enough

- Keith Roach, M.D. Readers may email questions to: ToYourGood­Health@med .cornell.edu or mail questions to 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.

Dear Dr. Roach: My husband and I both came down with COVID. We had all of the usual symptoms and have since recovered.

We have been in isolation and are even wearing masks around the house to keep our (so far) uninfected son safe.

However, after 15 days for me and 17 days for my husband, we are still testing positive. We have used four different brands of at-home testing kits.

Are we still contagious? I haven’t been able to visit my 94-year-old father and really need to. Although we both have pacemakers, neither of us is taking medicines that affect the immune system.

J.R.

Answer:

It is common for people to continue to test positive for COVID even after a person has recovered. In people who have normal immune systems, it is thought that these positive test results do not represent an infectious virus.

Early in the pandemic, stringent testing was performed on many people who were persistent­ly positive despite resolution of their symptoms, and in none of those cases were they found to be infectious. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as well as other authoritie­s, do not insist on a negative test in order to stop isolation with people who don’t have an immune system disease and who only had mild or moderate COVID. Ten days is sufficient for this situation.

In people with a history of severe COVID (requiring hospitaliz­ation for very low oxygen levels) or with moderate to severe immune system diseases (such as advanced HIV, recent chemothera­py or some drugs that suppress the immune system), 20 days may be necessary. Consultati­on with an expert is appropriat­e.

COVID is still out there. If you haven’t gotten the new monovalent vaccine (which became available in September 2023), I recommend doing so.

Even if you have had COVID before, immunity wanes over time. The new vaccine was made to counteract newer strains of the virus.

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