The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

CDC: Stay home for the holiday

Rethink traditiona­l Thanksgivi­ng, Georgia’s top health offifficia­l adds.

- By J. Scott Trubey scott. trubey@ ajc. com

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday urged Americans to avoid t ravel over Thanksgivi­ng and to keep holiday gatherings contained within their households because of heightened ri sk of the coronaviru­s.

The new guidance comes as the virus rages across most of the country, and as cases and hospitaliz­ations in Georgia have started to climb.

“As cases continue to increase rapidly across the United States, the safest way to celebrate Thanksgivi­ng is to celebrate at home with the people you live with,” the CDC said on its website. “Gatherings with family and friends who do not live with you can increase the chances of getting or spreading COVID- 19 or the flflu.”

Within hours of the new CDC guidance, t he Georgia Department of Public Health ( DPH) issued a similar advisory.

“The surge of COVID- 19 infections in Georgia and across the country mean we must rethink our idea of a traditiona­l Thanksgivi­ng this year,” DPH Commission­er Dr. Kathleen Toomey said in a news release. “Each family must assess the risk of exposure to COVID- 19, especially among elderly or medically fragile individual­s, as they weigh the decision to host or attend a holiday gathering. Everyone needs to follow the guidance of wearing a face mask, social distancing and washing your hands frequently. And get a flu shot.”

Thanksgivi­ng travel is expected to be down this year because of the pandemic. But the new government warnings come as many Americans have booked travel and accommodat­ions for the holiday week and as many college students prepare to return home.

Forty- eight states — including Georgia — were listed in the red zone, or the most severe segment, for new cases in the most recent White House Coronaviru­s Task Force report, dated Sunday.

The task force report warned of asymptomat­ic and pre- symptomati­c spread, particular­ly in social gatherings.

Georgia fared better in the report than all but three states in terms of the rate of new cases, but the trendlines are worrisome. The seven- day rolling average of new confirmed cases in Georgia has more than doubled

since Oct. 2 and the rolling average of people currently hospitaliz­ed in the state is up by more than one- third since Oct. 12.

On Thursday, Georgia reported 2,735 net new cases of the corona virus, 835 new probable cases as determined by rapid antigen tests and 40 confirmed deaths. To date, 396,641 confirmed cases of the disease have been diagnosed in Georgia, along with 40,515 probable cases determined by antigen tests and 8,569 deaths.

DPH recommends Georgians bring their own food, drinks, plates, cups and utensils if attending a gathering outside their home and to wear am ask when not eating. The guidance also suggested using single-use condiment packets and dressing sand disposable food containers and dinnerware.

If hosting, DPH said, it is safer to do so outdoors with a limited number of guests and to disinfect commonly touched surfaces between uses. If sharing food, the state suggests to have a designated server.

 ?? JOHN SPINK/ JSPINK@ AJC. COM/ 2019 ?? As the number of coronaviru­s cases is spiking in many places across the country, the CDC is advising would- be holiday travelers, such as these spotted last Thanksgivi­ng at Atlanta’s Hartsfield- Jackson Internatio­nal Airport, to change their plans, stay home and celebrate only with small groups of family members.
JOHN SPINK/ JSPINK@ AJC. COM/ 2019 As the number of coronaviru­s cases is spiking in many places across the country, the CDC is advising would- be holiday travelers, such as these spotted last Thanksgivi­ng at Atlanta’s Hartsfield- Jackson Internatio­nal Airport, to change their plans, stay home and celebrate only with small groups of family members.

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