The Day

CDC trims isolation to 10 days for those who test positive

- By ARIANA EUNJUNG CHA

The 14-day quarantine window for people in the United States who test positive for the coronaviru­s has shrunk to 10 days.

The two-week self-isolation rule had been a facet of pandemic life in the nation since March. Those who test positive for the coronaviru­s but do not have symptoms have counted down the minutes until they could be free to venture out. The number forms the basis for provisions in Congress’s coronaviru­s relief bill that gave workers at small and midsize companies 14 days of paid sick leave. And states such as New Mexico and Rhode Island — adjacent to virus epicenters at different times — issued emergency orders requiring visitors to stay put in their temporary residences for two weeks.

Now the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, acknowledg­ing expanded understand­ing about the infectious­ness of the novel coronaviru­s, is shortening its recommende­d isolation and quarantine period.

It now advises most people with active cases of COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronaviru­s, to isolate for 10 days after symptoms begin and 24 hours after their fever has broken. For those who have a positive test but are asymptomat­ic, the public health agency as of Friday recommende­d quarantini­ng 10 days from the testing date.

In the six months since the virus has been in the United States, multiple studies have suggested most people are infectious for only a short period, usually four to nine days. In one large contact-tracing study of high-risk interactio­ns in hospitals and homes, exposures of people to the virus took place within five days of a patient’s illness.

The CDC noted that a “limited number of persons with severe illness” may continue to produce the virus longer and may warrant extending the isolation period to as much as 20 days.

As with other guidelines about the coronaviru­s, much remains in flux, and differing opinions exist in different parts of the world about how long people should isolate or quarantine. Switzerlan­d requires people to isolate for 10 days, but some have argued that is still too long. In Taiwan, travelers from low-risk countries such as New Zealand,

South Korea and Vietnam must quarantine in a hotel for just seven days. Visitors from higher-risk countries are still subject to a 14-day rule.

The World Health Organizati­on updated its guidance in June to recommend 10 days of isolation for those who do not have symptoms and at least 13 days for people with symptoms.

Julian Tang, a virologist with the University of Leicester in the United Kingdom and the National University of Singapore, said he has been advising clinical teams for several months that patients can be released from isolation at 10 days. He said papers examining when people are capable of spreading the virus have been remarkably consistent about the time frame for potential transmissi­on.

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