New York Post

CRY TO CUT ISOLATION

- By EMILY CRANE, STEVEN NELSON and BRUCE GOLDING ecrane@nypost.com

The head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Wednesday that new guidelines to shorten isolation over the coronaviru­s could come “soon” — as the UK reduced the period in England from 10 to seven days.

During a Wednesday appearance on “CBS Mornings,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said officials were “actively examining” relevant data “and “doing some modeling analyses to assess” whether to make any changes.

“And we anticipate that we’ll have some updates soon,” Walensky said.

Also Wednesday, the UK Health Security Agency said infected people in England don’t have to continue isolating if they test negative on the sixth and seventh days.

The HSA — the British equivalent of the CDC — said its analysis suggested a seven-day isolation period, combined with two negative tests, had nearly the same protective effect as a 10-day isolation period without testing.

“We want to reduce the disruption from COVID-19 to people’s everyday lives,” Health Secretary Sajid Javid said.

Dr. Marty Makary, a professor at Johns Hopkins University, told The Post that “the Biden administra­tion need to be more practical and less rigid.”

“It’s not feasible in the hospital, for example, to have staff leave their post for 10 days every time they think they’ve been exposed,” Makary said in an e-mail.

“We would have no one left to run our ICUs. A five-day quarantine period is badly needed to enable businesses to function.”

Dr. Bob Wachter, chairman of the University of California, San Francisco’s Department of Medicine, also told Axios that the surging omicron variant meant the CDC needed to take action.

”If it turns out that every doctor and nurse who tests positive needs to stay away for 10 days, we could be emptied of health-care providers pretty quickly,” Wachter said.

Other medical profession­als have tweeted recently that the CDC should revise its guidance.

“Their current recommenda­tions for 10 days of isolation regardless of vaccinatio­n status make no sense,” wrote Carlos del Rio, associate dean of the Emory School of Medicine in Atlanta.

“If vaccinated (and specially if boosted), asymptomat­ic or with mild symptoms and neg Ag [antigen] test at day 5 should slow return to work.”

Indiana University’s chief health officer, Dr. Aaron Carroll, tweeted, “Mandatory 10-day isolation is going to make things really difficult for essential services.”

Dr. Lucy McBride — a Harvardtra­ined, Washington, DC, internist who writes a COVID-19 newsletter, also tweeted, “I thought CDC woulda changed isolation from 10 to 5 days for vax’d ppl infected w Delta.”

On Tuesday, Delta Airlines CEO Ed Bastian asked Walensky in a letter to cut the 10-day isolation period in half for vaccinated workers with “breakthrou­gh” infections.

“Our employees represent an essential workforce to enable Americans who need to travel domestical­ly and internatio­nally,” he wrote,

“With the rapid spread of the omicron variant, the 10-day isolation for those who are fully vaccinated may significan­tly impact our workforce and operations.”

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