From Yahoo/USA TODAY:
“From vaccines to testing:
What travelers need to know before the new US travel system on Nov. 8”
The United States is about to
make it much easier for vaccinated international travelers to visit. The White
House announced that a new air travel system will take effect Nov. 8, allowing
entry for fully vaccinated foreign tourists. The system is set to launch nearly
two years after the U.S. began imposing travel restrictions to prevent the
spread of COVID-19. The move by the White House will essentially have the U.S.
drop its travel ban on dozens of countries while also making entry more
challenging for the unvaccinated. The new system will allow entry for foreign
nationals only with vaccinations approved for emergency use by the World Health
Organization and would add testing requirements for unvaccinated Americans.
Here’s what we know about the
new travel requirements: A new international air travel system will go into
effect Nov. 8, allowing entry into the United States for fully vaccinated
foreign tourists.
What are the entry
requirements for foreign nationals? Starting Nov. 8, non-citizen,
non-immigrant air travelers will need to show proof of full vaccination as well
as a pre-departure negative coronavirus test taken within three days of travel
before they can board a plane to the U.S. The U.S. will accept nucleic
acid amplification tests, including PCR tests, and antigen tests. Airlines
will collect basic personal contact information from all U.S.-bound travelers
for contact tracing. Airlines are required to keep the information on hand so
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention can reach out to travelers who
may have been infected or exposed to COVID-19. Masking will be required,
but there will be no quarantine mandate.
The change will make entering the
U.S. possible for travelers from countries now listed on the U.S. travel ban,
which prohibits entry for travelers who have been in any of the regions within
the past 14 days. The travel ban took effect in early 2020 and includes: China,
Iran, the United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland, Brazil, South Africa, India,
The European Schengen area (Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia,
Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia,
Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland,
Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Monaco, San Marino
and Vatican City)
Travelers arriving from countries
not included in the ban will face stricter entry requirements come Nov. 8 and
will need to show proof of vaccination and a negative COVID test taken three
days prior to travel. Currently, the U.S. asks international air passengers
only to get tested within three days of their flight to the U.S. and show
either the negative test result or proof of recovery from COVID-19 before
boarding.
What about the land borders
with Mexico and Canada? New travel rules will also take effect for foreign
nationals arriving by land or passenger ferry. Starting Nov. 8, fully
vaccinated foreign nationals can cross the land borders for nonessential
reasons such as tourism or visiting friends and family. Entry rules along the
border will change again in early January, with all travelers – including those
traveling for essential purposes – required to show proof of full vaccination.
Foreign travelers will be able to show vaccination status in either a paper
or digital format, and U.S. Customers and Border Protection will spot-check
travelers’ vaccination documents. Foreign nationals will also need appropriate
travel documentation to enter the country. More details on the land
border restrictions are expected to be announced in the coming days.
Which vaccines does the US
accept for travel? The CDC has announced that vaccines approved for
emergency use by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and World Health
Organization will be accepted for air travel. White House officials expect the
CDC to approve the same vaccines for travelers entering the U.S. by land or
ferry. The FDA has authorized three COVID-19 vaccines for emergency use
during the pandemic: Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and Pfizer-BioNTech, the
last of which has received the FDA's full stamp of approval.
Vaccines with WHO approval for
emergency use include:
Johnson & Johnson
Moderna
Pfizer-BioNTech
Oxford-AstraZeneca/Covishield
Sinopharm
Sinovac
The CDC confirmed that it would
accept a mix-and-match approach to vaccinations. Travelers who have any
combination of FDA- or WHO-approved vaccines will be considered fully
vaccinated. The new travel policy does not accept foreign travelers who have
had COVID and received just one shot in a two-dose series. White House press
secretary Jen Psaki said Tuesday that the administration will "continue to
review" its entry requirements.
How do the new rules affect
kids? Foreign nationals under 18 are exempt from the vaccination
requirement. Children under two will not need to take a pre-departure COVID
test. Kids 2 and older traveling with a fully vaccinated adult can test
three days prior to departure, while children traveling alone or with
unvaccinated adults will need to get tested within one day of departure. Currently,
all air passengers 2 or older, including U.S. citizens and permanent residents,
need to show a negative coronavirus test to fly to the U.S.
What are the entry
requirements for Americans? The new travel system adds more stringent
testing requirements for unvaccinated U.S. travelers. Starting Nov. 8,
unvaccinated U.S. citizens and permanent residents will need to take a test one
day before departure and test again upon arrival in the U.S. Entry
requirements will not change for vaccinated Americans. They will still need to
show proof of a negative coronavirus test taken no more than three days before
departure. Americans will not need to be fully vaccinated to board
international flights to the U.S.
Are there any exemptions? There
is a limited set of travelers who are exempt from the vaccine requirement for
entry. Children under 18, certain COVID-19 vaccine clinical trial
participants and travelers with adverse reactions to the vaccines – such as
people who have had severe anaphylactic allergic reactions to a prior COVID-19
vaccine – will be exempt. People traveling on non-tourist visas from
countries with less than 10% of its population vaccinated who need to enter the
U.S. for emergency or humanitarian reasons are also exempt from the vaccine
requirement. There are about 50 countries considered to have low vaccine
availability at this time. These exempt travelers will generally need to
show that they will comply with public health mandates, including a requirement
to be vaccinated in the U.S. if they plan to stay more than 60 days. There
will also be testing accommodations for travelers who can show proof that they
have recovered from the coronavirus within the preceding 90 days.
^ At least the US is announcing what
Travelers need to do in order to come to the US. It will help reopen the
country to more people in a safe way. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/vaccines-testing-travelers-know-us-202115155.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
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