Sunday, February 18, 2024

Chicken Soup for COVID-19?

Earlier this week, NBC reported that the CDC is considering a substantial change to its isolation guidelines for individuals who are COVID+. Under the proposal, individuals with COVID would be allowed to re-enter society 24 hours after they are fever-free without medications. In essence, according to the report, CDC's recommendation would be to treat COVID like the flu.

Soon after the NBC story broke, an anonymous official at DHHS emphasized there is no change yet, meaning their 5-day isolation/10-day masking guideline is still in effect, at least until it isn't, pointing out that "discussions are at an early stage and no definitive decisions have been made."

Outside the Washington Beltway, support for the change seems to be building:
Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious diseases expert at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee, said he and his colleagues have privately encouraged the CDC to drop the five-day isolation period, in part because there’s little evidence it’s stopping the spread of Covid. 

The “rigorous recommendations that are currently in place do not reflect common practice,” Schaffner said. “It’s difficult to demonstrate that strict isolation has had a notable impact on transmission.” 

California and Oregon have already broken with the CDC, suggesting that people don't need to stay home if they've been fever-free for 24 hours without medication.

“With each day, the risk of communicability diminishes,” Schaffner said. “Public health recommendations have to be practical.” That is, people may stay home for a few days if they have a fever and feel achy and fatigued. After that, it’s back to business as usual.

Dr. David Margolius, the public health director for the city of Cleveland, said he was also in favor of easing isolation restrictions.

“For a couple years, people really associated public health with the elimination of Covid,” Margolius said. But “public health is about increasing life expectancy for our residents. It’s about improving quality of life. And that is more than just controlling one virus.”

Covid is still contagious, said Dr. Abraar Karan, an infectious disease physician at Stanford Medicine. “What the CDC and health departments are trying to say is that we need to have policies that people are going to actually follow,” Karan said.

As of this month, emergency room visits, hospitalizations and deaths from Covid are down, according to the latest CDC data.

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