rlk
DIS Veteran
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- Dec 3, 2007
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dropping recommendations that Americans who are not up-to-date on vaccines quarantine themselves if they come into close contact with an infected person.
The agency continues to say people who test positive should isolate from others for at least five days, regardless of whether they were vaccinated.
Under the new guidelines, people who tested positive and have stopped isolation after five days can also stop masking as early as eight days after first testing positive, depending on symptoms.
the end of the recommendation that schools do routine daily testing, although that practice can be reinstated in certain situations during a surge in infections, officials said.
The CDC also dropped a "test-to-stay" recommendation, which said students exposed to COVID-19 could regularly test – instead of quarantining at home – to keep attending school. With no quarantine recommendation anymore, the testing option disappeared too.
Masks continue to be recommended only in areas where community transmission is deemed high, or if a person is considered at high risk of severe illness.
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countriesWe're at roughly the same number of daily cases as we were at last September.
More highlights (IMO): *although I encourage you to read the whole CDC release
These are direct quotes:
“Receipt of a primary series alone, in the absence of being up to date with vaccination* through receipt of all recommended booster doses, provides minimal protection against infection and transmission”
”CDC’s COVID-19 prevention recommendations no longer differentiate based on a person’s vaccination status because breakthrough infections occur, though they are generally mild (16), and persons who have had COVID-19 but are not vaccinated have some degree of protection against severe illness from their previous infection”
I'm curious what you mean by go wild. What are people going to do that they aren't doing already?Get ready for a ridiculously bad flu season as people go wild.
We went from everyone locked down and wearing masks to everyone pretty much back to normal. Flu season was almost nonexistent last year. I'm expecting more of a return to normal plus the impact of no exposure to the flu last year other than shots. It's going to be bad. And I don't think it's really on anyone's radar right now.I'm curious what you mean by go wild. What are people going to do that they aren't doing already?
We get flu shots every year. No flu or COVID with or without masks and traveled to Boston, Bahamas (2), WDW (lost count), France and Germany.We went from everyone locked down and wearing masks to everyone pretty much back to normal. Flu season was almost nonexistent last year. I'm expecting more of a return to normal plus the impact of no exposure to the flu last year other than shots. It's going to be bad. And I don't think it's really on anyone's radar right now.
We did have a lot of flu in our area last year. I thought of last year being that re-exposure year. However, in our area, we have been business as usual since the beginning of 2021 pretty much. So, in some areas, your theory will probably be true.We went from everyone locked down and wearing masks to everyone pretty much back to normal. Flu season was almost nonexistent last year. I'm expecting more of a return to normal plus the impact of no exposure to the flu last year other than shots. It's going to be bad. And I don't think it's really on anyone's radar right now.
I don’t think the isolation recommendations changed. It had been 5 days isolation and then an additional 5 days with a mask if going out in public. The only difference was that you could test out of the masking by testing negative on antigen tests 48 hrs apart After the 5 day isolation. So I guess that could shorten the masking period from 10 to 8 days if you tested negative on days 6 and 8?
They still advise wearing a mask for those additional 5 days and suggest testing on the 5th day. Testing negative especially twice is more on a confidence level you are less likely to spread it but wearing a mask around others (not just in public but around those in your household most especially if there were concerns of immunocomprised/higher risk) and avoiding travel ups that confidence.I don’t think the isolation recommendations changed. It had been 5 days isolation and then an additional 5 days with a mask if going out in public. The only difference was that you could test out of the masking by testing negative on antigen tests 48 hrs apart After the 5 day isolation. So I guess that could shorten the masking period from 10 to 8 days if you tested negative on days 6 and 8?