Tag Archives: COVID-19

American Medical Association calls for ‘immediate end’ to use of ivermectin for COVID-19

The American Medical Association (AMA) is calling for the “immediate end” to the use of ivermectin to treat COVID-19, and for doctors to stop prescribing it for that purpose, amid a spike in the use of the drug. 

Ivermectin, often used as a deworming agent in animals and sometimes for humans, is not approved to treat COVID-19 and has not been shown to work for that purpose. Poison control centers have recorded a five-fold increase in calls related to ivermectin, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.  

The AMA, the country’s largest doctors group, is now joining in warning against use of the drug, joining the Food and Drug Administration and the CDC.  

“We are alarmed by reports that outpatient prescribing for and dispensing of ivermectin have increased 24-fold since before the pandemic and increased exponentially over the past few months,” the AMA said in a statement, joined by the American Pharmacists Association and American Society of Health-System Pharmacists. “As such, we are calling for an immediate end to the prescribing, dispensing, and use of ivermectin for the prevention and treatment of COVID-19 outside of a clinical trial.” 

The groups also call on doctors and pharmacists to warn patients about using the drug to treat COVID-19.  

“Use of ivermectin for the prevention and treatment of COVID-19 has been demonstrated to be harmful to patients,” the groups said. “Calls to poison control centers due to ivermectin ingestion have increased five-fold from their pre-pandemic baseline.” 

Experts say that instead of risking the use of unproven drugs, people should get vaccinated.



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Joe Rogan Says He Tested Positive For Covid-19

Joe Rogan announces the fighters during a ceremonial weigh in for UFC 264 at T-Mobile Arena on July 09, 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Photo: Stacy Revere (Getty Images)

Podcaster Joe Rogan says he’s tested positive for covid-19 and claims he’s taking ivermectin to treat it, along with a host of other drugs. Ivermectin has become seen as a wonder drug against covid-19 for right wingers in the U.S., sometimes leading people to buy a livestock version of the drug for themselves, but the FDA warns it’s not helpful for treating coronavirus.

“I got back from the road Saturday night, feeling very weary—I had a headache—and I just felt run down,” Rogan said in an Instagram video describing his symptoms.

“Throughout the night I got fevers, and sweats, and I knew what was going on, so I got up in the morning and got tested, and it turns out I got covid,” Rogan continued in the video which was posted to his 13.1 million followers on Wednesday.

Rogan said he “threw the kitchen sink” at the illness, and proceeded to list the drugs he’d taken, including some that have been shown to work against covid-19, including monoclonal antibodies and prednisone. In fact, President Donald Trump was treated with monoclonal antibodies after he got covid-19 in 2020, shortly before the presidential election, and started knocking on death’s door.

Rogan also listed other non-traditional treatments, like an NAD drip, a vitamin drip, and the ivermectin, which, again, is not recommended for treating covid-19, though it has many other uses. The podcaster said he was feeling lousy on Sunday but has been feeling a little better each day since.

Rogan has declined to say whether he’s vaccinated against covid-19, but has promoted anti-vaxxer sentiment in the past. As the New York Times points out, Rogan has offered refunds to anyone who bought tickets for his upcoming show in New York after Mayor Bill DeBlasio said that people attending large events would need to show proof of vaccination.

The U.S. has seen a disturbing rise in covid-19 cases over recent weeks, with over 210,000 new cases and 1,932 new deaths on Wednesday alone. While so-called breakthrough cases occur, the vast majority of cases are among the unvaccinated.

The U.S. covid-19 vaccination rate is currently 53%, with the southern states struggling the most at getting their populations vaccinated. Alabama, for example, has just 38.4% of its residents vaccinated and is facing a critical shortage of ICU bed capacity at the state’s hospitals. And it’s expected to get worse as the delta variant of covid-19 rips its way through the unvaccinated population.

Get vaccinated, if you haven’t already. It’s a smarter move than the horse paste.



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COVID-19 Deaths Nearly Double in One Week | News

A total of 49 COVID-19 deaths were reported in the region in the past seven days (Aug. 25-31), nearly double the 25 reported the week before (Aug. 18-24), the County Health and Human Services Agency announced today.

The newly reported deaths include 37 men and 12 women. Most of the deaths occurred in late August. Forty-one had underlying medical conditions, four did not and four had medical history pending.

Of the 49 deaths, 12 were 80 years of age or older, 13 were in their 70s, 12 were in their 60s, seven were in their 50s and five were in their 40s.

“These deaths are very tragic because they could have been prevented,” said Wilma J. Wooten, M.D., M.P.H., County public health officer. “We now have very safe and effective vaccines against COVID-19. These deaths should not have occurred.”

Most of the deaths being reported now have been San Diegans who were not vaccinated.

Public health officials expected that more people would get vaccinated after the Food and Drug Administration gave full approval to the Pfizer vaccine on Aug. 23. The region has seen a slight uptick in vaccinations.

An average of 3,749 San Diegans got their first doses daily between Aug. 23 and Aug. 28. In comparison, an average of 3,651 people received their first shot between Aug. 17 and Aug. 22.

“Unvaccinated San Diegans are primarily the ones ending up in the hospital and, unfortunately, dying,” Wooten said.

No-cost COVID-19 vaccines are widely available in the region. They can be found at medical providers, retail pharmacies, community clinics and County public health centers for people who do not have a medical provider. For a list of locations and more information, visit  www.coronavirus-sd.com/vaccine.

Vaccination Progress:

Cases, Case Rates and Testing:

  • 949 COVID-19 cases were reported to the County on Aug. 31. The region’s total is now 335,302.
  • San Diego County’s case rate per 100,000 residents is 38.7 overall, 15.2 for fully vaccinated people and 68.0 for not fully vaccinated San Diegans.
  • 17,204 tests were reported to the County on Aug. 31, and the percentage of new positive cases was 5.5%.
  • The 14-day rolling percentage of positive cases among tests is 6.6%.

Community Setting Outbreaks:

  • 66 new community outbreaks were confirmed in the past seven days (Aug. 25 through Aug. 31): 15 in business settings, 11 in daycare/preschool/childcare settings, nine in restaurant/bar settings, six in retail settings, five in health care settings, five in faith-based settings, four in TK-12 grade school settings, three in government settings, two in construction settings, one in an emergency services setting, one in a hotel/resort/spa setting, one in a restaurant setting, one in a grocery setting, one in a distribution warehouse setting, and one in a college/university setting.
  • The community outbreaks trigger is more than seven in a 7-day period.

More Information:

Data updates to the County’s coronavirus-sd.com website are published around 5 p.m.

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Health experts warn Michigan could face new surge of COVID cases

DETROIT – C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital is calling for government and community leaders to step up to help stop the spread of coronavirus.

The hospital took out ad space in the New York Times, calling on leaders to protect children by getting vaccinated and wearing masks.

Last year, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer issued a state of emergency and issued an executive order mandating masks. This year she has left the decisions at the local level. Local 4 asked her if she’ll regret not ordering another mandate and she said the answer is to get vaccinated.

“These vaccines work. They are safe, they are effective, free and easy to access,” she said.

Physician and nursing leaders from 21 Michigan health systems shared an open letter on Wednesday urging people to get vaccinated as Michigan faces another surge in cases.

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The number of people getting vaccinated has slowed.

“For the sake of our economy, sports season and ability to keep our kids in school let’s mask up and protect one another,” Whitmer said.

Michigan’s rising case numbers are just one reason health experts are concerned about another spike in cases as we head into the fall and winter months.

Beaumont’s top infectious disease doctor, Nick Gilpin, said he’s seeing some red flags. He said he’s seeing more community spread across Beaumont Hospitals.

“That is kind of the early warning system for COVID. When you start to see the community numbers, the test positivity numbers in the community start to go then typically the hospitalizations start to follow,” Gilpin said.

Gilpin said the COVID positivity rate is now 6-8% in Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties. He said he worries numbers may continue to increase with students returning to school.

Beaumont infectious disease expert sees warning signs of new COVID wave

COVID-19 Discussion Forum:

Join our dedicated space to discuss the pandemic. You’re invited to share questions, experiences, insights and opinions.

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47-Year-Old DC Woman Dies of COVID-19 – NBC4 Washington

A 47-year-old woman has died of COVID-19, Washington, D.C., health officials said Tuesday.

The woman is the 1,160th D.C. resident to die from the coronavirus, according to D.C.’s health department.

D.C. did not release any further details about the woman.

On Aug. 25, three D.C. residents died, including an 82-year-old woman, a 63-year-old man and a 53-year-old man.

An additional 178 people tested positive for the virus on Monday, bringing the total number of D.C. COVID-19 cases to more than 55,000, the city said.

Along with most of the nation, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention currently classifies D.C.’s level of COVID-19 transmission as “high.”

Health systems across the U.S. have been dealing with record hospitalizations in recent weeks due to the highly contagious delta variant.

CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said Tuesday that unvaccinated people shouldn’t travel over Labor Day weekend.

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Moderna vaccine creates twice as many antibodies as Pfizer: research

A study into the immune responses of the two mRNA COVID-19 vaccines found that Moderna’s vaccine created twice as many antibodies as the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.

Researchers analyzed the antibody levels of Belgium health care workers after they received both doses of the vaccines, including 688 vaccinated with Moderna and 959 who received the Pfizer shots, in the study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association on Monday.

Among those who had not been previously infected, the Moderna recipients averaged 2,881 units per milliliter, compared to the Pfizer recipients who counted 1,108 units per milliliter.

Participants who previously contracted COVID-19 reported higher antibody levels, raising the overall average among all participants to 3,836 units per milliliter for Moderna and 1,444 units per milliliter for Pfizer.

The antibody levels in those who received Moderna were higher in infected, uninfected and across age categories, according to the study. 

The researchers said the difference in antibody levels could potentially be attributed to the higher mRNA content within the Moderna vaccine and the longer interval between the initial and second shots. The second vaccine of Moderna is given four weeks after the first shot, while the Pfizer vaccine is administered three weeks following the initial shot.

The antibody testing was conducted before vaccination and six to 10 weeks after the second dose. The study found the levels to be negatively correlated with age in those who hadn’t been previously infected, with the highest antibody levels among those younger than 35. 

This research follows a preprint study released ahead of peer review earlier this month that suggested that the Moderna vaccine’s effectiveness dropped to 76 percent and the Pfizer shot’s effectiveness fell to 42 percent in July when the delta variant had taken hold in the U.S.

That preliminary study from the Mayo Clinic emphasized that both vaccines still are highly protective against infection and serious illness. The research was also accompanied by a notice that the early findings “should not be used to guide clinical practice.”

In the U.S., more than 94 million people are fully vaccinated with the Pfizer-BioNTech shot, and more than 65 million are fully vaccinated with the Moderna vaccine. Another 14 million have received the single-dose Johnson & Johnson shot, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).



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Here is Minnesota’s COVID-19 update for Tuesday, August 31

Credit: Governor Tom Wolff via Flickr

Today’s update includes data from Saturday-Sunday, so the totals may appear elevated compared to a normal, single day of reporting. 

Tuesday’s COVID-19 update from the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) includes 3,882 new cases and six newly reported deaths, all six happening in August.  

The state’s death toll is 7,811 since the start of the pandemic. Of the total deaths, 58.2% (4,544) were residents of long-term care.

As of August 29, the state reported that 3,314,084 people have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, while 3,111,569 people have completed the vaccine series. The percentage of Minnesota’s population with at least one shot, based on age group:

  • 12-15: 50%
  • 16-17: 57%
  • 18-49: 62%
  • 50-64: 74%
  • 65+: 92%
  • Total population: 60%

55.9% of Minnesota’s total population, including children under the age of 12 who are not eligible for the vaccine, has completed the vaccine series. That jumps to 66.2% when excluding kids under the age of 12. MDH has a public dashboard to track vaccine progress in Minnesota, and you can view it here.

Hospitalizations

Through August 30, the number of people with COVID-19 hospitalized in Minnesota was 589 (down from 591 reported Monday).

Of those hospitalized, 164 people are in intensive care and 425 were in general hospital care. The spring surge saw a high of 202 patients in intensive care and 517 people in general hospital care.

Here’s how many people are hospitalized based on regions of Minnesota, though this doesn’t mean that each patient contracted the virus in these specific regions, as they may have been diverted depending upon available staffed beds.

  • Metro: 86 ICU, 247 non-ICU
  • Central: 27 ICU, 49 non-ICU
  • Southeast: 26 ICU, 43 non-ICU
  • Northeast: 13 ICU, 26 non-ICU
  • Northwest: 8 ICU, 15 non-ICU
  • South-central: 3 ICU, 27 non-ICU
  • Southwest: 1 ICU, 14 non-ICU
  • West-central: 0 ICU, 4 non-ICU

Testing and positivity rates.

The 3,882 positive results in Tuesday’s update were from 65,029 completed tests, creating a test positivity rate of 5.97%.

According to Johns Hopkins University, Minnesota’s test positivity rate over the past seven days is 4.88%, though that number is distorted and lower than it would otherwise be due to a data dump of around 60,000 tests last week.

The World Health Organization recommends that a percent positive rate (total positives divided by total completed tests) of below 5% for at least two weeks is necessary to safely keep the economy open. That 5% threshold is based on total positives divided by total tests.

Coronavirus in Minnesota by the numbers

  • Total tests: 11,456,835 (up from 11,391,772)
  • People tested: 5,078,283 (up from 5,041,034)
  • People with at least 1 vaccine shot: 3,314,084 (up from 3,305,165)
  • People who have completed vaccine series: 3,111,569 (up from 3,099,199)
  • Positive cases: 649,964 (up from 646,094)
  • Deaths: 7,811 – 429 of which are “probable*” (up from 7,805)
  • Patients no longer requiring isolation: 630,243 (up from 625,274)

* Probable deaths are patients who died after testing positive using the COVID-19 antigen test, which is thought to be less accurate than the more common PCR test.

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Millions of Americans will lose unemployment benefits this weekend

OLIVIER DOULIERY | AFP | Getty Images

Millions of people are poised to lose their unemployment benefits this weekend, when federal pandemic-era policies will end after almost 18 months.

Congress authorized a historic expansion of the country’s safety net for jobless individuals in March 2020 to manage the fallout of the Covid-fueled economic downturn.

Lawmakers twice extended those temporary expansions, which increased the number of people eligible for unemployment benefits and raised the amount of weekly aid for recipients.

Absent of congressional action, that aid will lapse after Saturday or Sunday, depending on state administrative rules. Lawmakers seem unlikely to extend the policies for a third time given improvements in the economy and labor market in recent months.

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If that happens, about 8.8 million Americans will lose their benefits entirely, according to an estimate from The Century Foundation, a progressive think tank.

Another 3 million or so will see their aid reduced by $300 a week, the group projects. The average person would get about $321 a week without the supplement, or about 38% of their pre-layoff wage, according to Labor Department data.

“We’re cutting benefits off when many, many individuals are still relying on them,” according to Till von Wachter, an economics professor at the University of California Los Angeles and director of the California Policy Lab.

“This is sort of a recurring problem in American recessions. We ask politicians to come up with benefit programs, and they set end and start dates,” he added. “They’re set in advance and have nothing to do with how the economy is.”

The White House supports ending the $300 weekly bonus payments as scheduled. Officials point to an an average of 832,000 new jobs added per month over the last three months, and a U.S. unemployment rate that’s fallen to 5.4% as evidence of a rebounding economy.

However, the Biden administration urged states with high unemployment rates to continue paying benefits to certain groups past this weekend’s cutoff, using federal funds allocated to states by the American Rescue Plan. Those groups include the long-term unemployed and workers like independent contractors who don’t qualify for traditional state aid.

It’s unclear whether states will do so, though. The U.S. Department of Labor isn’t tracking those decisions because use of the funds isn’t within its oversight, according to a spokeswoman.

Already, 26 states moved to end most or all federal benefits in June or July, earlier than their official Labor Day cutoff.

We’re cutting benefits off when many, many individuals are still relying on them.

Till von Wachter

director of the California Policy Lab

Their governors, all Republican except for Louisiana’s, said enhanced benefits were keeping people from looking for work and holding back the economic recovery by exacerbating labor shortages.

More generous benefits have also led criminals to target the unemployment system with greater frequency.

“Between massive fraud and worker shortages, expanded unemployment insurance benefits have arguably been the federal government’s most flawed — and damaging — economic policy enacted in response to Covid-19,” Rachel Greszler, a research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a right-leaning think tank, wrote in July.

However, available evidence suggests benefits haven’t played a big role in hiring challenges.

In states that cut federal benefits in June, about 7 in 8 jobless workers receiving benefits hadn’t found work by early August, according to a recent study. That suggests withdrawing benefits didn’t lead to a big uptick in employment and caused households to cut $2 billion in spending from the local economy, the study found.

Decreases in spending may have an adverse impact on jobs, if consumers pull back on dining out and other activities to save money.

Lawmakers must weigh these net employment effects when making policy decisions, according to Betsey Stevenson, a professor of public policy and economics at the University of Michigan. Relative to unemployment benefits, the question becomes: Does the loss of household income that or the job-disincentive effect of enhanced benefits matter more?

“People need the money more than we need to get the incentives right [at the moment],” said Stevenson, citing available research.

Economists suggest that factors beyond unemployment benefits are likely playing a larger role in employers’ difficulty finding workers.

For example, Covid health risks are still present, exacerbated by the highly contagious delta variant, and childcare-related road blocks haven’t fully receded.

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COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness in preventing hospitalization drops among oldest Americans

The effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccines against hospitalization appears to drop over time among adults over 75, although it still remained above 80% at the end of July, according to an analysis released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The new data was presented Monday to the CDC’s independent panel of vaccine experts, who met to discuss federal plans for a potential booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine next month.

The agency’s finding is the latest to suggest protection against severe disease may be starting to wane among the most vulnerable Americans vaccinated earliest in the pandemic, as the country battles a record wave of infections fueled by the Delta variant. But the agency also conceded that drawing conclusions about the amount of time vaccines protect older or more vulnerable people from hospitalization would not be easy.

“It actually may be very difficult for us to disentangle time, since vaccination and the impact of the Delta variant, especially in some populations that we know were vaccinated earlier in the time course. So if we see waning in the last couple of months, it could be really difficult,” Dr. Sara Oliver, a key CDC vaccine official, told the panel. 

The analysis appeared to show that vaccines continue to confer the same or close to the same amount of protection for people up to the age of 75, though. The effectiveness at preventing hospitalization “remains high, 94% or higher, for adults 18 to 49,” Dr. Oliver said. 

An earlier CDC analysis collected from this COVID-NET surveillance data was also released over the weekend as a preprint that has yet to be peer reviewed. The study’s authors say the vaccines appeared to remain “highly effective in preventing hospitalization” from COVID-19, even as an estimated 16.1% of hospitalized patients were fully vaccinated in June.

Hospitalizations among people who were fully vaccinated were more likely to have occurred among older residents of nursing homes, and among those with underlying conditions — nearly a third with immunosuppressive conditions.

“Based on these data from January through July … COVID-19-associated hospitalization rates were 17 times higher in unvaccinated,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky told reporters earlier this month, previewing the data’s release.

The CDC said Monday it plans to convene another meeting of the panel in mid-September to discuss more data on the additional shots, likely ahead of the Biden administration’s plans to roll out booster shots the week of September 20. 

While top federal health officials previously said they were planning for the possibility that third doses of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines would be needed eight months after Americans received their first two shots, recent data from the drugmakers and abroad have suggested booster shots might be needed sooner than six months from vaccination. 

“The number eight months has been thrown around. Six months has been discussed. And that’s where the science will ultimately drive what those recommendations will be,” Dr. Jay Butler, a top CDC official in the agency’s COVID-19 response, told a Twitch livestream last week.

The Food and Drug Administration will have to green-light vaccine makers’ submissions for regulatory approval to administer booster shots before the CDC’s advisers can vote on a formal recommendation for a third shot.

Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech say they completed submitting their application for approval of a booster dose last week, citing data on people who saw a boost in antibodies with a third shot “between 4.8 and 8 months after” their initial two doses.

Nearly one million Americans have already received an additional dose of COVID-19 vaccine since August 13, when the CDC and FDA allowed for some immunocompromised Americans to return for another shot.

But health officials have been warning providers against giving shots “off-label” to other Americans ineligible to receive more doses, after the CDC said that more than a million Americans had received an unauthorized booster shot earlier this year. 

A handful of the committee’s members voiced concerns over the White House’s booster dose announcement coming ahead of formal recommendations. 

“Since the South is having a horrible outbreak of Delta, many, many, many hospitals have already started vaccinating healthcare workers with third doses and patients,” said Dr. Helen Keipp Talbot, a professor at Vanderbilt University on the panel.

“That is very frightening to me that healthcare providers are trying to do the best job that they can, are taking guidance from HHS and White House, and now have put themselves at risk,” said Dr. Talbot. 

The CDC’s advisers also discussed Monday the safety and effectiveness of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine, following its full approval by the Food and Drug Administration earlier this month.

The panel’s members voted unanimously to recommend the continued use of the shots to prevent COVID-19, finding that the vaccines’ benefits in averting COVID-19 hospitalization and death outweighed the risks of rare but serious side effects like myocarditis and pericarditis.

Only 701 reports from the rare heart inflammation cases have been received by the CDC of confirmed hospitalizations in people under 30 following their vaccination, an official told the advisers on Monday. Most have since been discharged and recovered from their symptoms.

To date, nearly 160 million Americans have been fully vaccinated with the Pfizer or Moderna COVID-19 vaccines.

“The risks that we’re talking about following vaccination is generally within seven days but the benefits last for far longer than seven days,” Dr. Grace Lee, a pediatrics professor at Stanford University and chair of the advisory committee.

“It’s important for us to continue to look ahead, particularly as schools have reopened, and we recognize that there are a significant proportion of our children in schools who have not yet had the opportunity to be vaccinated because they are not eligible for vaccination. So this is going to continue to be incredibly important for us,” Dr. Lee added.



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Which Caribbean islands are open only to vaccinated travelers?

Adina Eigen took her first trip to the British Virgin Islands in December 2020. Around that time, it had one of the world’s lowest Covid rates among islands that had reopened.

The 42-year-old mother of four from Sands Point, New York, has since returned twice, checking infection rates — and vaccination statistics — before her trips.

“The staff at Oil Nut Bay is entirely vaccinated,” she said of the luxury resort where her family stayed. “The property is not accessible by land and very closely monitored by sea.”

The British Virgin Islands are part of a rising number of Caribbean destinations that attract vaccinated travelers — while proving less attractive to unvaccinated people.

Travelers to the British Virgin Islands

Vaccinated Partially vaccinated Unvaccinated
June
2021
78% 6% 16%
July
2021
88% 2% 10%
BVI’s Central Statistics Office

Along with Barbados and St. Lucia, the British Virgin Islands allow unvaccinated travelers to enter only if they quarantine for one week. Data shows few are willing to do so, especially when they have other options in the Caribbean that don’t require quarantines or vaccine certificates.

The relative strictness or leniency of entrance requirements in the Caribbean is reshaping travel trends in the region. Unvaccinated travelers are gravitating to the islands that will let them in, while the vaccinated want places that keep the unimmunized out.

Vaccinated travelers only

At least seven Caribbean nations and territories have announced mandatory vaccination policies for incoming adult travelers — Anguilla, Grenada, St. Barts, St. Kitts and Nevis, Trinidad and Tobago, Turks and Caicos, as well as the Cayman Islands.

The Cayman Islands plan to admit vaccinated travelers from Sept. 9 to Oct. 13 during the third phase of its structured reopening. Thereafter, the territory may let unvaccinated travelers enter if they quarantine for 14 days.

People have more interest in traveling to islands where there are vaccination protocols in place.

Eric Bamberger

Zeta Global

Safety is cited as the main reason behind the requirement, but such policies may also be good for business.

Marketing technology company Zeta Global analyzed site traffic to the main tourism websites of several islands after they announced vaccinated-only policies, said Eric Bamberger, senior vice president of hospitality at Zeta Global. 

Following the announcements, travel interest increased to all of them:

  • Grenada — up 25%
  • St. Kitts and Nevis — up 26%
  • Cayman Islands — up 44%
  • Anguilla — up 59%  

The data showed two trends emerging in the Caribbean, said Bamberger.

“People have more interest in traveling to islands where there are vaccination protocols in place,” he said. “And their interest among other islands without vaccination protocols is waning.”  

Data from travel marketing company Adara indicates enthusiasm for vaccinated-only entrance policies. Searches and bookings spiked when Trinidad and Tobago announced it was reopening only to immunized travelers — and then again when the policy was implemented.  

Adventure travel company Intrepid Travel is seeing a preference for destinations with more restrictions, said Matt Berna, the company’s managing director of North America. 

“We have found our customers to be more interested in traveling to Caribbean destinations with more strict and firm policies and travel restrictions related to Covid-19,” he said.

For example, among the most popular trips being booked by North Americans, “none of our tours in Mexico are in the top 20,” he said. Mexico has lenient Covid protocols, but Intrepid Travel does not. Starting Sept. 1, all travelers and tour leaders with the company must be vaccinated, said Berna.

Eigen told CNBC she considered going to Mexico at one point, but found it “scary” to visit a country with few restrictions.

“I am vaccinated and would love to go to an island that only allows vaccinated people in,” she said, a view echoed by several travelers who spoke to CNBC.

“I am vaccinated and would love to go to an island that only allows vaccinated people in,” said Eigen, with her family in Oil Nut Bay in the British Virgin Islands.

Courtesy of Adina Eigen

Caribbean authorities are expressing a positive response to the policies.

“Our arrival figures have been consistent, and load factors continue to improve,” said Petra Roach, the CEO of Grenada Tourism Authority.

Turks and Caicos prepared itself for mixed feedback when it announced its policy earlier this month, said Jamell R. Robinson, the islands’ minister of health and human services.

However, “we have received a hugely encouraging overall response from new and existing visitors,” he said. “We anticipate it will have a long-term positive impact on bookings.”

No vaccine required

In contrast to islands with relatively strict policies, places such as the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, the Bahamas and the U.S. Virgin Islands have entrance policies that rely on testing rather than vaccines.

Data from Adara suggests travel interest was highest to the Dominican Republic before other Caribbean islands put vaccination mandates in place beginning earlier this summer. Most travelers to the Dominican Republic don’t need to present a negative test, but some are subject to Covid-19 breath tests upon arrival.

As vaccination rates increased among the island’s top markets — namely, the United States and Canada — travel interest dropped. Covid infection rates in the Dominican Republic decreased from June to August, but interest and searches did not rebound accordingly.

Site traffic increased to the main tourism websites for Jamaica and the Bahamas in June and July, but visitors spent less time searching and clicked fewer pages, said Zeta Global’s Bamberger.

Vaccinated people want to vacation in places that had stricter requirements, so they aren’t mixing with the unvaccinated.

 “These trends show that … travelers still have more tentative feelings about traveling to areas without vaccination policies,” he said.

Similar sentiments may apply to travelers’ desire to fly. A study by the financial website FinanceBuzz published this month indicates more people would be likely to fly (48%) if airlines required vaccinations, than the amount that disfavors such a policy (27%). 

Line in the sand

These figures suggest that islands with lenient protocols — i.e., those without quarantines or vaccine mandates — are likely attracting unvaccinated travelers while deterring vaccinated ones.  

“Vaccinated people want to vacation in places that had stricter requirements, so they aren’t mixing with the unvaccinated,” said Adara’s chief marketing officer Carolyn Corda.

CNBC asked the Dominican Republic, Bahamas and Jamaica for the percentage of incoming travelers who aren’t vaccinated. The Bahamas said it was unable to provide that figure. Jamaica and the Dominican Republic did not respond to CNBC’s request.

Puerto Rico’s tourism authority, Discover Puerto Rico, has said that the island has a vaccine mandate, though it does not have one.

Discover Puerto Rico’s website says that “vaccinations are required” for guests and employees in its hotels, house rentals, restaurants and bars. Discover Puerto Rico’s CEO separately confirmed the vaccine “mandate” to CNBC.

But a closer look at Puerto Rico’s restrictions shows that a negative Covid test on arrival, and weekly negative tests afterward, will suffice without a vaccine. Asked for clarification, a representative for Discover Puerto Rico told CNBC that “the ‘mandate’ refers to the need for either vaccination or frequent negative testing.”

Discover Puerto Rico’s CEO Brad Dean said vaccination rates among travelers to Puerto Rico rose from 9% in May to 58% in August.

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