What to know about travel and COVID-19
The global travel industry
has been in turmoil since
the outbreak of COVID-19
in December 2019.
Many would-be travelers,
including business travelers
and vacationers, canceled previously
planned trips or delayed
future travel plans in the hopes
of reducing their risk of catching
a virus that CNN estimated
had claimed more than 4,000
lives across the globe between
December 2019 and mid-March
2020. According to estimates
from the Global Business Travel
Association, business travel
revenue loss totaled $820 billion
across the globe through
the first week of March 2020.
The International Air Transport
Association estimated that
global airlines stood to lose
$113 billion in sales if the coronavirus
continued to spread, a
decline in sales that the industry
has not experienced since
the global financial crisis of
2008.
That loss in revenue has
led many airlines and cruise
lines to decrease prices in an
effort to entice more people to
travel. However, the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention
Caribbean L 18 ife, Sept. 18-24, 2020
note that travel could
be dangerous, particularly for
people with underlying health
conditions who intend to take
cruises.
As of March 2020, the CDC
was recommending that travelers
who fit that criteria defer
all cruise ship travel. Cruises
place vast numbers of people in
frequent and close contact with
each other, conditions that can
promote the spread of respiratory
viruses like COVID-19.
The CDC notes that, due to
the way air is circulated and filtered
on airplanes, most viruses
and other germs do not easily
spread on airplanes. However,
those who want to err on the
side of caution should discuss
travel with their physicians,
including whether or not it’s
beneficial to delay unnecessary
travel plans until the threat
of COVID-19 is minimized. —
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Wellness