USA TODAY US Edition

CDC: Vaccinated Americans can travel at low risk

Negative virus test is still needed to fly back to US

- Dawn Gilbertson

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Americans who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 can resume travel at low risk to themselves, but the agency is still not recommendi­ng travel given rising case counts.

CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, who last week issued an urgent plea to limit travel because of fears of another COVID-19 surge, said Friday that the new guidance is based on studies showing the “real-world” effectiven­ess of COVID-19 vaccines.

Vaccinated travelers no longer have to follow the CDC’s recommenda­tions to get a coronaviru­s test before and after travel unless required by the destinatio­n. They still need to wear masks and take other precaution­s. A person is considered fully vaccinated two weeks after receiving the last recommende­d vaccine dose.

The CDC’s announceme­nt does not change one high-profile COVID-19 travel restrictio­n, however. Vaccinated travelers still must abide by a CDC order, issued in January, requiring a negative coronaviru­s test to board internatio­nal flights to the United States and should get another test three to five days after returning.

Despite the new guidance, Walensky said in a White House briefing that the CDC is not reversing its advice to avoid nonessenti­al travel during the pandemic, vaccinated or unvaccinat­ed.

“CDC is not recommendi­ng travel at this time due to the number of rising cases,” she said.

Asked how that squares with the announceme­nt that vaccinated Americans can safely travel, she said: “Our guidance is silent on recommendi­ng or not recommendi­ng fully vaccinated people travel. Our guidance speaks to the safety of doing so. If you are vaccinated, it is lower-risk.”

The CDC’s recommenda­tions, which have evolved during the pandemic under the general banner of avoiding nonessenti­al travel and still apply to those who aren’t vaccinated, call for getting tested one to three days before a trip, three to five days after a trip and staying home and self-quarantini­ng for seven days after travel, even with a negative test. If unvaccinat­ed travelers don’t get tested, they should stay home and selfquaran­tine for 10 days after travel.

Those guidelines were still in place for vaccinated travelers when the CDC issued broad guidance for vaccinated Americans in early March.

They are only guidelines, though, and plenty of travelers have boarded planes or taken road trips without the CDC’s blessing. In March, passenger counts at U.S. airports topped 1 million a day every day but five, according to the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion – something that hasn’t happened in more than a year.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL/AP ?? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said travelers still need to wear masks and take other precaution­s.
CHARLIE RIEDEL/AP The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said travelers still need to wear masks and take other precaution­s.

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