US moving to toughen testing requirement for travelers
Washington — The Biden administration is moving to
toughen testing requirements for international travelers to the U.S., including
both vaccinated and unvaccinated people, amid the spread of the new omicron
variant of the coronavirus.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a
Tuesday statement that it was working toward requiring that all air travelers
to the U.S. be tested for COVID-19 within a day before boarding their flight.
Currently those who are fully vaccinated may present a test taken within three
days of boarding.
“CDC is working to
modify the current Global Testing Order for travel as we learn more about the
Omicron variant; a revised order would shorten the timeline for required
testing for all international air travelers to one day before departure to the
United States,” the agency said.
The precise testing protocols were still being finalized
ahead of a speech by President Joe Biden planned for Thursday on the nation’s
plans to control the COVID-19 pandemic during the winter season, according to a
senior administration official who said some details could still change.
“CDC is evaluating
how to make international travel as safe as possible, including pre-departure
testing closer to the time of flight and considerations around additional
post-arrival testing and self-quarantines,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky
said earlier Tuesday.
The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to
discuss the administration’s plans before the announcement, said options under
consideration also include post-arrival testing requirements or or even
self-quarantines.
CDC currently recommends post-arrival testing 3-5 days after
landing in the U.S. from overseas and self-quarantine for unvaccinated
travelers, though compliance is voluntary and is believed to be low.
The move comes just weeks after the U.S. largely reopened
its borders to fully vaccinated foreign travelers on Nov. 8 and instituted a
two-tiered testing system that allowed fully vaccinated travelers more time to
seek a pre-arrival test, while requiring a test within a day of boarding for
the unvaccinated.
Much remains unknown about the new variant, which has been
identified in more than 20 countries but not yet in the U.S., including whether
it is more contagious, whether it makes people more seriously ill, and whether
it can thwart the vaccine. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the top U.S. infectious disease
expert, said more would be known about the omicron strain in two to four weeks
as scientists grow and test lab samples of the virus.
As he sought to quell public concern about the new variant,
Biden said that in his Thursday remarks, “I’ll be putting forward a detailed
strategy outlining how we’re going to fight COVID this winter — not with
shutdowns or lockdowns but with more widespread vaccinations, boosters,
testing, and more.”
Asked by reporters if he would consult with allies about any
changes in travel rules, given that former President Donald Trump had caught
world leaders by surprise, Biden said, “Unlike Trump I don’t shock our allies.”
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