USA TODAY US Edition

CDC: Don’t travel for winter holidays, either

- Dawn Gilbertson

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is urging travelers not to travel for the upcoming winter holidays, a repeat of its guidance for Thanksgivi­ng travel.

“The best thing for Americans to do in the upcoming holiday season is to stay at home and not travel,” Dr. Henry Walke, the CDC’s COVID-19 incident manager, said in a news briefing Wednesday.

“Cases are rising. Hospitaliz­ations are increasing, Deaths are increasing. We need to try to bend the curve, stop this exponentia­l increase,” Walke said.

For those who decide to travel, the CDC is now recommendi­ng travelers get tested for the coronaviru­s before and after their trips.

The CDC recommends a test one to three days before travel and another three to five days after travel, plus reducing nonessenti­al activities for seven days after travel, Walke said. Those who do not get tested should reduce nonessenti­al activities for 10 days after travel, the agency said.

Testing does not eliminate travel risk, Walke said, but when combined with reducing nonessenti­al activities and other precaution­s, it can make “travel safer,” he said.

Before it stepped up advice on not traveling during the holidays, the CDC had given only general advice on travel during the pandemic: “Travel may increase you chance of getting and spreading COVID-19. Staying home is the best way to protect yourself and others.”

The recommenda­tions come as coronaviru­s cases continue to surge in the United States, with hospitaliz­ations and deaths increasing. The U.S. has reported more than 13.8 million cases and over 272,400 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University data. The global totals: 64.2 million cases and 1.48 million deaths.

Last week, the CDC strongly recommende­d against Thanksgivi­ng travel. The agency said postponing travel and staying home is the best way to protect yourself and others this holiday season.

That didn’t deter air travelers, who flocked to airports across the country. On Sunday alone, the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion screened 1,176,091 travelers, a pandemic high. (That is still down 59% from the Sunday after Thanksgivi­ng in 2019.)

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