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CDC removes coronaviru­s travel warning for cruises

- By Richard Tribou

The coast is clear as far as FUXLVH OLQHV &29,' DQG the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is concerned.

The CDC on Wednesday officially removed any level of travel warning for cruises, which means the federal agency no longer considers it a risky venture to catch the virus, although cases are still a possibilit­y on board.

“While cruising will always SRVH VRPH ULVN RI &29,' transmissi­on, travelers will make their own risk assessment when choosing to travel on a cruise ship, much like they do in all other travel settings,” said CDC spokespers­on Nick Spinelli in an email.

If a new wave of COVID were to threaten travelers again, the CDC could bring back its warning, and it still UHFRPPHQGV &29,' SUHcaution­s.

“Cruise ship travelers should make sure they are up WR GDWH ZLWK WKHLU &29,' vaccines before cruise ship travel and follow their cruise ship’s requiremen­ts and recommenda­tions,” Spinelli said.

Two years ago, the CDC took the cruise industry to task, warning that its confined spaces made them more susceptibl­e to the risk of the VSUHDG RI &29,'

In its Travel Health Notices, the CDC had recently re-upped cruise travel to its highest risk level — Level 4 — as the omicron variant spread in late December recommendi­ng people to avoid cruise travel, especially those at increased risk of severe illness from &29,'

As the threat of omicron waned, the CDC lowered it EDFN WR /HYHO LQ PLG )HEruary and to the moderate Level 2 earlier this month. Now the notice is gone from the CDC site.

Cruise Lines Internatio­nal Associatio­n spokespers­on Laziza Lambert said the move represents an accurate assessment of just how much cruise lines have done to fight the virus.

“Today’s decision by the (CDC) to altogether remove the Travel Health Notice for cruising recognizes the effective public health measures in place on cruise ships and begins to level the playing field, between cruise and similarly situated venues on land, for the first time since March 2020,” she said in an emailed statement.

The CDC still tracks the VSUHDG RI &29,' RQ VKLSV sailing from the U.S. under a voluntary program involving 108 ships from lines including Royal Caribbean, Carnival, Norwegian, Disney and most others have opted into.

Most ships sailing are designated “highly vaccinated,” PHDQLQJ DW OHDVW SDVsengers and crew have received at least the initial one- or two-dose regimen of shots from among approved vaccines.

Of the 108 tracked ships, RQO\ VDLOLQJ ZLWK SDVVHQgers are labeled as Green, meaning no reported COVID cases on board within the last ZHHN 7KHUH DUH VKLSV ODbeled Yellow, meaning less WKDQ RI SDVVHQJHUV RU RI FUHZ ZLWK SRVLWLYH FDVHV ZKLOH DQRWKHU DUH labeled Orange, meaning those thresholds have been exceeded.

For example, a 4,000-passenger ship would need 12 passengers on board to be infected in order to be labeled as Orange.

Ship status is tracked using a dashboard on the CDC website.

The cruise industry was shut down globally in March 2020 and only began sailing from the U.S. last June. Things were ramping up with more ships coming back online in the fall until omicron tamped down the progress. Some lines even canceled some sailings in early January.

With fewer and fewer cases each week, cruise line officials applauded the CDC’s status change.

 ?? Pedro Portal/El Nuevo Herald/TNS ?? Royal Caribbean’s latest ship, the Wonder of the Seas, the world’s largest cruise ship, at Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
Pedro Portal/El Nuevo Herald/TNS Royal Caribbean’s latest ship, the Wonder of the Seas, the world’s largest cruise ship, at Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

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