People who test positive for COVID no longer need to isolate for five days, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday.
The CDC’s new guidance now matches public health advice for flu and other respiratory illnesses: Stay home when you’re sick, but return to school or work once you’re feeling better and you’ve been without a fever for 24 hours.
The shift reflects sustained decreases in the most severe outcomes of COVID since the beginning of the pandemic, as well as a recognition that many people aren’t testing themselves for COVID anyway.
“Folks often don’t know what virus they have when they first get sick, so this will help them know what to do, regardless,” CDC director Dr. Mandy Cohen said during a media briefing Friday.
Over the past couple of years, weekly hospital admissions for COVID have fallen by more than 75%, and deaths have decreased by more than 90%, Cohen said.
“To put that differently, in 2021, COVID was the third-leading cause of death in the United States. Last year, it was the 10th,” Dr. Brendan Jackson, head of respiratory virus response within the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said during the briefing.
Many doctors have been urging the CDC to lift isolation guidance for months, saying it did little to stop the spread of COVID.
The experiences of California and Oregon, which previously lifted their COVID isolation guidelines, proved that to be true.
“Recent data indicate that California and Oregon, where isolation guidance looks more like CDC’s updated recommendations, are not experiencing higher COVID-19 emergency department visits or hospitalizations,” Jackson said.
Changing the COVID isolation to mirror what’s recommended for flu and other respiratory illnesses makes sense to Dr. David Margolius, the public health director for the city of Cleveland.
“We’ve gotten to the point where we are suffering from flu at a higher rate than COVID,” he said. “What this…
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