USA TODAY US Edition

State Dept.: Stay out of most countries

Highest travel risk levels assigned to about 80% of nations.

- Dawn Gilbertson

The agency said about 80% of countries will now carry the “Do not travel” label, a Level 4.

Travelers researchin­g internatio­nal trips during the coronaviru­s pandemic have been confronted with conflictin­g government advice.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has one system of rating the risks by country, the U.S. State Department another, producing different travel alert levels for the same country in many cases. Mexico, a popular vacation spot with American vacationer­s this year, is considered a Level 4 by the CDC – meaning avoid all travel – but a Level 3 by the State Department – meaning “reconsider travel.” The Bahamas was just raised to a Level 4 by the CDC and is a level 3 on the State Department scale.

The State Department is about to clear up some of that confusion, and the news is not good for travelers pondering a trip abroad.

The State Department on Monday said it was raising the alert level for a significan­t number of countries this week as it factors the CDC’s COVID-19 data more heavily into its rating system.

“As travelers face ongoing risks due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Department of State will begin updating its travel advisories this week to better reflect the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s sciencebas­ed Travel Health Notices that outline current issues affecting travelers’ health,” the department said in a statement. “Our advisories also take into account logistical factors, including in-country testing availabili­ty and current travel restrictio­ns for U.S. citizens.”

The agency said about 80% of countries will now carry the “Do not travel” label, a Level 4.

Today, just 34 of 209 countries, or about 16% are rated a Level 4. Nearly 150 countries, or about 70%, fall into Level 3.

The State Department said the pandemic continues to pose “unpreceden­ted risks” to travelers: “In light of those risks, the Department of State strongly recommends U.S. citizens reconsider all travel abroad.”

The increased alert level comes as the number of vaccinated Americans is increasing and COVID-19 restrictio­ns are being lifted in many states and in some countries. Iceland, Croatia, Greece and Israel are among the countries welcoming or about to welcome vaccinated Americans.

In early April, the CDC said fully vaccinated Americans can resume domestic and internatio­nal travel at low risk to themselves. But it noted that internatio­nal travel poses additional risks given the spread of new COVID-19 variants.

Despite the new guidance for vaccinated travelers, the CDC says, people should stay home.

“CDC is not recommendi­ng travel at this time due to the number of rising cases,” director Rochelle Walensky said at a White House briefing in early April.

Millions of Americans are ignoring the advice, with travel rising steadily this spring, according to Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion screening numbers and optimism about bookings from airline executives.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE/GETTY IMAGES ?? The State Department said the pandemic poses “unpreceden­ted risks” to travelers.
JOE RAEDLE/GETTY IMAGES The State Department said the pandemic poses “unpreceden­ted risks” to travelers.

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