Headline RoundupDecember 2nd, 2020

CDC Reduces Recommended Quarantine Period After Exposure

Summary from the AllSides News Team

On Wednesday, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reduced the recommended days a person must quarantine after exposure to the COVID-19 coronavirus. People are now advised to self-isolate for seven to 10 days; previous guidance recommended 14 days of quarantine. People exposed to the virus are advised to end their quarantine after seven days if they receive a negative test. If they don't obtain a negative test, they can stop quarantining after 10 days. The CDC defined close contact as 15 minutes spent within six feet of an infected person. The new guidelines are based on new agency study data as well as outside institutions, according to Dr. Henry Walke, incident manager for the CDC’s COVID-19 response. The story was widely covered by outlets across the political spectrum.

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