• Sat. Oct 22nd, 2022

Passengers will have to show they’ve tested negative within 3 days of boarding, to try to keep new virus variant out of U.S.

Dec 25, 2020

Atlanta — The United States will require airline passengers from Britain to get a negative COVID-19 test before their flight, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced late Thursday. That makes the U.S. the latest country to announce new travel restrictions because of a new variant of the coronavirus that is spreading in Britain.
Airline passengers from the United Kingdom will have to get negative COVID-19 tests within three days of their trip and provide the results to the airline they intend to use, the CDC said in a statement. The agency said the order will be signed Friday and go into effect on Monday.
Airlines must deny boarding to any passenger who doesn’t get a test, the CDC said.
“This additional testing requirement will fortify our protection of the American public to improve their health and safety and ensure responsible international travel,” the agency said.
The CDC added that, because of travel restrictions in place since March, air travel to the U.S. from the U.K. has already been cut by 90%.
But the new strain may already be in the U.S., doctors are warning.
“We have had people coming from the U.K. for the past few weeks, so why would this virus not jump on the plane with everybody in their blood and in their respiratory secretions?” Dr. Dyan Hes, a pediatrician in New York City, said Tuesday on CBSN.
The new policy is an about-face for the Trump administration, which told U.S. carriers Tuesday it didn’t plan to require any testing for passengers on flights from the U.K.
Some airlines had already agreed to require passengers test negative before flying to New York from Britain.
Last weekend, Britain’s prime minister said a new variant of the coronavirus seemed to spread more easily than earlier ones and was moving rapidly through England, but British officials have stressed there’s no evidence the new version makes people sicker.
Dozens of countries have since barred flights from the U.K.
The co-founder of BioNTech — one of the companies making vaccines being distributed worldwide this week — has said its version is “highly likely” to work against the U.K. variant.