USA TODAY International Edition

COVID rates in Cancun can’t stop tourists

- Jayme Deerwester Contributi­ng: Dawn Gilbertson, Michael Stucka; Associated Press

Traveling to Cancun? There are developmen­ts you need to be aware of before boarding your flight.

The rate of COVID- 19 infections is up in the popular resort town, located on Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula in the Caribbean Sea.

Quintana Roo, Mexico, Gov. Carlos Joaquín estimated a 65% spike in Benito Juarez, the municipali­ty that includes Cancun, marking its highest rate of infection to date at a time when the rest of Mexico is improving.

“This is highly concerning,” he said.

The COVID- 19 situation in Cancun

It’s hard to tell just how widespread coronaviru­s is in Cancún because of low testing rates and incomplete data. According to Our World In Data, just 17% of COVID- 19 tests in Mexico come back positive. Experts at Johns Hopkins University have said that’s far below than the levels needed to properly monitor coronaviru­s outbreaks. Here’s what we do know:

Cancun is in one of the hardest- hit regions right now. According to the Mexican Ministry of Health, Quintana Roo, where Cancun is located, is one of three states in the orange or secondhigh­est risk category in Mexico’s colorcoded system, which assesses the current COVID- 19 situation in each state and triggers or relaxes safety protocols as its numbers change. Currently, no states are classified as red.

More COVID- 19 restrictio­ns are in place. Under orange conditions, hotels, restaurant­s, tours and water parks must operate at 50% capacity, while beaches can admit only 30% of their normal levels. Bars, nightclubs and casinos must close.

If you test positive while in Mexico, you may have trouble getting home.

Since January, Americans have been required to present a negative COVID- 19 test in order to board a flight back to the U. S. You’ll still need to be tested even if you’re fully vaccinated. Anyone who tests positive must remain in Mexico until they test negative.

At a March congressio­nal hearing on Americans stranded abroad, Rep. Thomas Massie, R- Ky., recounted the story of an unnamed constituen­t who

went to Cabo San Lucas and tested positive. She was asymptomat­ic and took two more tests to be sure the initial result was correct. The family was told to stop testing and wait for 14 days, when they would be eligible to get a doctor’s note to fly home if they had no COVID- 19 symptoms.

“But they couldn’t get a doctor in Mexico to sign off on that,” Massie said.

The family ended up flying to Tijua

na, Mexico, walking across the border to San Diego and flying back to Kentucky from there, he said, repeating a story he had shared on Twitter in February.

Americans still wiling to roll the dice

Even though the State Department and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention both listed Mexico among the world’s highest- risk countries, plenty of Americans have been willing to gamble on a Mexican getaway over the past few months. Fewer than 10% of Mexico’s population is fully vaccinated and only about a third of Americans are. ( The Mexican government, which is getting its vaccine supply from Russia, has warned of a shortage that could keep people from getting their second shots on time.)

Because Mexico does not require a negative COVID- 19 test for entry and does not impose a mandatory quarantine on people arriving from other countries, Mexico is more popular than ever with Americans determined to take a beach vacation.

When the U. S. imposed its testing requiremen­t for returning residents, resorts in Quintana Roo began touting onsite testing to help departing guests take the hassle out of getting swabbed in a foreign country.

Such tactics seem to be working. According to an April 28 report from travel- booking website Skyscanner. com, Cancun was the most- searched location for travel groups and the fourth most popular with Americans overall.

Mexican Riviera News reported that Cancun Internatio­nal Airport saw 5% more tourists in March 2021 than they did at the same point in 2019.

Michigan resident Korey Mudd tested positive for COVID- 19 toward the end of his long- delayed honeymoon this year and spent an additional nine days quarantine­d in his hotel.

He now warns others not to press their luck.

“Anybody we know that says they’re going, my wife kind of says, ‘ You might want to think twice about it. We had a pretty bad experience,’ ” Mudd said.

 ??  ?? Spring break in Cancun was different in 2021 amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.
Spring break in Cancun was different in 2021 amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.
 ?? PHOTOS BY DAWN GILBERTSON/ USA TODAY ?? Travelers wait in line for a COVID- 19 test at Cancun Internatio­nal Airport.
PHOTOS BY DAWN GILBERTSON/ USA TODAY Travelers wait in line for a COVID- 19 test at Cancun Internatio­nal Airport.

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