Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Americans didn’t resist travel for Thanksgivi­ng, data shows

- By Stephen Groves

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — Americans couldn’t resist the urge to gather for Thanksgivi­ng, driving only slightly less than a year ago and largely ignoring the pleas of public health experts, who begged them to forgo holiday travel to help contain the coronaviru­s pandemic, data from roads and airports shows.

The nation’s unwillingn­ess to tamp down on travel offered a warning in advance of Christmas and New Year’s as virus deaths and hospitaliz­ations hit new highs a week after Thanksgivi­ng.

U.S. deaths from the outbreak eclipsed 3,100 on Thursday, obliterati­ng the single-day record set last spring.

Vehicle travel in early November was as much as 20 percent lower than a year earlier, but it surged around the holiday and peaked on Thanksgivi­ng Day at only about 5 percent less than the pandemic-free period in 2019, according to StreetLigh­t Data.

“People were less willing to change their behavior than any other day during the pandemic,” said Laura Schewel, founder of StreetLigh­t Data.

Airports also saw some of their busiest days of the pandemic, though air travel was much lower than last year.

The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion screened more than 1 million passengers on four days during the Thanksgivi­ng travel period.

Since the pandemic gutted travel in March, there has been only one other day when the number of travelers topped 1 million: Oct. 18.

“If only a small percentage of those travelers were asymptomat­ically infected, this can translate into hundreds of thousands of additional infections moving from one community to another,” Dr. Cindy Friedman, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention official, said this week during a briefing.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has urged people to stay home for the holidays, but officials acknowledg­ed that many people would not heed that advice and advised them to get tested before and after trips.

 ?? Charles Rex Arbogast The Associated Press ?? Travelers arriving Nov. 24 at Midway Airport in Chicago are reminded of the city’s COVID-19 travel orders. Data shows millions traveled to gather on Thanksgivi­ng.
Charles Rex Arbogast The Associated Press Travelers arriving Nov. 24 at Midway Airport in Chicago are reminded of the city’s COVID-19 travel orders. Data shows millions traveled to gather on Thanksgivi­ng.

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