The Oklahoman

Fauci says he’s not flying because of COVID-19 risk

- David Oliver USA TODAY

You may be debating whether you want to get on a plane anytime soon. One person not debating is Dr. Anthony Fauci, who says he won’t be taking off during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health, told MarketWatc­h that flying is risky right now. And because he’s in an older age bracket, he’s not willing to take the risk.

“I am in a risk category,” Fauci said. “I don’t like to admit it, but I’m 79 years old. I can’t think of a reason to go trans-Atlantic. Right now, I’m very sequestere­d. I’m on a coronaviru­s task force. I go to the White House almost every day.” Fauci said he spends half his day in his office working to develop a vaccine and drugs for COVID-19, which has now infected more than 4 million Americans.

“I don’t fancy seeing myself getting infected, which is a risk when you’re getting on a plane, particular­ly with the amount of infection that’s going on right now,” he said. Fauci also questioned the effectiveness of temperatur­e checks before flights, something airlines have been pushing the U.S. federal government to start.

“I’m not sure taking temperatur­es is all it’s cracked up to be because there are a lot of false negatives and false positives,” he said. “It’s best to just question people: ‘Do you have any symptoms? Have you been near someone who is infected?’ The time spent asking a couple of simple questions is probably more effective than just taking temperatur­es.”

In spite of all the precaution­s now in place, Joseph Khabbaza, a pulmonary and critical care physician at the Cleveland Clinic, said flying offers the most potential of travel activities for exposure to the coronaviru­s, because of the nature of how planes are configured.

“Once you’re in the cabin, you don’t know who’s on the plane,” he said. “You’re in relative closer proximity to people you don’t know.” Still, he said, flying is safer than it was earlier in the pandemic because of the changes airlines have made.

In addition to spacing and sanitizing, he said, face masks add an extra layer of protection from the virus. Most U.S. car-

riers now require passengers to wear them.

Airlines, airports, the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion and others have touted intensive new cleaning measures and safety protocols including mask requiremen­ts, social distancing, plexiglass partitions at ticket and gate counters and other precaution­s in a bid to protect employees and lure skittish vacation and business travelers back.

But cases have spiked, and based on recent earnings reports, airlines are still struggling.

United said Tuesday that it will operate at barely over one-third of capacity through September. United CEO Scott Kirby said that demand has taken a step backward in July from where it was in mid-June, but it now seems to have bottomed.

“We expect we’re kind of back to where we were in late May and that demand will start to gradually recover once again as we get through the rest of the year,” he said.

Executives from Southwest, American, Spirit and Alaska airlines also detailed the falloff i n already shrunken travel demand in a series of quarterly earnings conference calls Thursday, echoing reports from United and Delta.

“In short, the crisis continues,” American CEO Doug Parker said. “This is less about people’s concern about flying and much more about having a reason to travel.” Contributi­ng: Curtis Tate and Dawn Gilbertson, USA TODAY; The Associated Press

 ??  ?? Dr. Anthony Fauci in Washington, D.C., on June 26. SUSAN WALSH/AP
Dr. Anthony Fauci in Washington, D.C., on June 26. SUSAN WALSH/AP

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