
Sumary of CDC Says Travel Is Low Risk If You’re Fully Vaccinated:
- Fully vaccinated domestic travelers don’t need to be tested before or after traveling unless their destination requires it..
- On April 2, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced that people who are fully vaccinated with a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) authorized vaccine can travel safely within the United States..
- According to the CDC, you’re considered fully vaccinated 2 weeks after you receive the last required dose of the COVID-19 vaccine..
- This means you’re fully vaccinated 2 weeks after the second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna-NIAID vaccines, and 2 weeks after the single-dose Johnson &.
- The travel guidance comes from the reasoning that people who are fully vaccinated are less likely to contract and transmit the coronavirus..
- For those who are fully vaccinated, 2 weeks after the last required dose, the risk of out-of-home activities like traveling is substantially lower,”.
- Dr. Robert Amler, dean of New York Medical College School of Health Sciences and Practice and a former CDC chief medical officer, told Healthline..
- Fully vaccinated travelers do not need to get tested before or after travel unless their destination requires it..
- They can still get COVID-19 without noticeable symptoms and continue to spread the virus to other unvaccinated people,”.
- “In addition, a very small fraction of fully vaccinated people may still be at risk because no vaccine works 100 percent of the time..
- Dr. Kathleen Jordan, an infectious disease specialist and senior vice president of medical affairs at Tia, said this is especially important because communities across the United States are in different stages with changing vaccination rates, as well as widely varied rates of COVID-19 transmission..
- I would expect rapidly changing requirements in the coming weeks and months, so check in frequently with your destination public health guidance,”.
- The CDC also suggests waiting to travel outside the United States until you are fully vaccinated with an FDA authorized vaccine..
- Because international travel comes with more risks than domestic travel, once fully vaccinated, the CDC recommends the following:…