The International Air Transport Association

The organization says that vaccinated travelers add no additional risks to the domestic US population, and that increased immunity levels, the pervasiveness of Covid-19 in all 50 US states, rising vaccination rates and new therapeutics, all point to removing the testing requirement for fully vaccinated travelers. Willie Walsh, IATA’s Director General, commented: “The experience of Omicron has made it clear that travel restrictions have little to no impact in terms of preventing its spread. Moreover, as Omicron is already broadly present across the US, fully vaccinated travelers bring no extra risk to the local population. International travelers should face no additional screening requirements than what is applied to domestic travel. In fact, at this stage of the pandemic, travel should be managed in the same way as access to shopping malls, restaurants, or offices.” More than 74.3 million people – around 22 per cent of the US population – have had Covid-19, and that is almost certainly an undercount owing to asymptomatic infections and limited testing early in the pandemic. When combined with an adult population that is 74 per cent fully vaccinated, it is clear that the US is developing very high levels of population immunity. EU and UK already removed restrictions The organizations also noted that the EU has recommended that its member states remove Covid-19 travel restrictions for travel within the EU, and the UK has announced the removal of Covid-19 pre-departure testing for vaccinated air travelers to enter the country. The UK concluded that the cost to both passengers and airlines of the testing mandate could no longer be justified as there was no evidence the regime protected the population from Covid-19. Recent research by Oxer and Edge Health in Italy, Finland, and the UK all support the conclusion that travel measures do little to control the spread of Covid-19 when it is already broadly present in the local population. The studies found that, if implemented at a very early stage, travel restrictions may at best delay the peak of a new wave by a few days and marginally reduce the number of cases.
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