The Morning Call

Vaccinated people have limits eased

CDC: Small groups can meet indoors sans masks, distancing

- By Roni Caryn Rabin

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday issued long-awaited advice to Americans fully vaccinated against COVID-19, freeing them to take some liberties that the unvaccinat­ed should not, including gathering indoors in small groups without precaution­s while still adhering to masking and distancing in public spaces.

The agency offered good news to grandparen­ts who have refrained from seeing children and grandchild­ren for the past year, saying that vaccinated people may visit indoors with unvaccinat­ed people from a single household so long as no one among the unvaccinat­ed is at risk for severe disease if infected with the coronaviru­s.

In practice, that means fully vaccinated grandparen­ts may visit unvaccinat­ed healthy adult children and healthy grandchild­ren of the same household without masks or physical distancing. But the visit should be local — the agency still does

not recommend travel for any American, vaccinated or not.

The agency’s recommenda­tions arrived as state officials move to reopen businesses and schools amid a drop in virus cases and deaths. Federal health officials repeatedly have warned against loosening restrictio­ns too quickly, including lifting mask mandates, fearing that the moves may set the stage for a fourth surge of infections and deaths. According to a New York Times database, the seven-day average of new cases was more than 58,700, as of Sunday, a level that remains near the peaks reported last summer.

“With more and more people getting vaccinated, each day we are starting to turn a corner, and as more Americans are vaccinated, a growing body of evidence now tells us that there are some activities that fully vaccinated people can resume at low risk to themselves,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the CDC director, said at a White House news conference Monday.

But, she added, “While we work to quickly vaccinate people more and more each day, we have to see this through.”

The advice is couched in caveats and leaves room for amendments as new data become available. The guidance is a “first step,” Walensky said. “It is not our final destinatio­n.”

The agency did not rule out the possibilit­y that fully vaccinated individual­s might develop asymptomat­ic infections and spread the virus inadverten­tly to others, and urged those who are vaccinated to continue practicing certain precaution­s.

Agency officials encouraged people to be inoculated with the first vaccine available to them, to help bring the pandemic to a close and a resumption of normal life. The agency emphasized that vaccines are highly effective at preventing “serious COVID19 illness, hospitaliz­ation and death,” and said its guidance “represents a first step toward returning to everyday activities in our communitie­s.”

As of Monday, about 60 million people have received at least one dose of a COVID19 vaccine, including about 31.3 million people who have been fully vaccinated, according to the CDC. Providers are administer­ing about 2.17 million doses per day on average.

The CDC’s advice is aimed at Americans who are fully vaccinated, meaning those for whom at least two weeks have passed since they received the second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines, and those for whom at least two weeks have passed since receiving a single dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

The CDC said that “a growing body of evidence” suggests that people who are fully vaccinated are less likely to have asymptomat­ic infections and “potentiall­y less likely to transmit the virus that causes COVID-19 to other people.” Still, the agency did not rule out the possibilit­y that they may inadverten­tly transmit the virus.

Given the current state of research, the CDC advised:

Fully vaccinated Americans may gather indoors in private homes in small groups without masks or distancing. Vaccinated people may gather in a private residence without masks or distancing with unvaccinat­ed people, so long as they are from a single household and are at low risk for developing severe disease should they contract the coronaviru­s.

Vaccinated Americans need not quarantine or get tested if they have a known exposure to the virus, as long as they do not develop symptoms of infection. If they do develop symptoms, they must isolate themselves, get tested and speak with their doctors.

In public, vaccinated people must continue to wear masks, maintain social distance and take other precaution­s, such as avoiding poorly ventilated spaces, covering coughs and sneezes, washing hands often and following any other protocols that are in place.

Vaccinated people should avoid gatherings with multiple households, as well as large and medium-size gatherings. The agency did not specify numbers for a medium or large gathering.)

The CDC did not revise its travel recommenda­tions, continuing to advise that all Americans stay home unless necessary. Walensky noted that virus cases have surged every time there has been an increase in travel.

 ?? DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A health care worker injects a veteran with a COVID-19 vaccine at a veterans medical center in Washington, D.C., on Monday during a visit by President Joe Biden.
DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES A health care worker injects a veteran with a COVID-19 vaccine at a veterans medical center in Washington, D.C., on Monday during a visit by President Joe Biden.

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