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U.S. government lifts level-4 travel advisory

Seven countries are considered to be in a low-risk group, but the CDC continues to advise against non-essential travel to more than 200 other international locations

SAN DIEGO COUNTY, Calif. — If Taiwan or Greenland are in your travel plans, U.S. public health officials say you can go ahead and pack your bags.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday revised its travel advisory information. Previously, the agency told U.S. travelers to avoid all nonessential international travel because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Now, it says such travel is fine — but only to about 20 locations.

Seven places, including Thailand, Fiji and New Zealand, are in a low-risk group. CDC officials advise only that certain people, such as older adults and those with certain underlying medical conditions, talk to their doctors before making the trip.

For more than a dozen other locations, CDC has no precautions. Taiwan, Greenland, and Laos are on that list.

But the CDC continues to advise against non-essential travel to more than 200 other international locations.

"Now I feel like I can live a little!" said San Diegan Johnnisha Moore, who welcomed the decision. "I don't want to live in fear."

"I'm excited about it," added Dallas businessman Tom Mesa, who had traveled to San Diego for work Thursday. "I'm a proponent of us having that opportunity to be able to travel internationally once again." 

However, not all travelers are "on board" with boarding an overseas flight. 

"If people feel comfortable, they should... but I don't," said Maggie Gordon, a nurse practitioner who lives in Denver. "I just don't think it's safe right now...Maybe in a couple months? But I wouldn't."

Gordon has another concern: potentially being trapped in a foreign country once she's arrived there. 

"If we go over there and then for some reason the borders close down and we aren't allowed back, then what do we do? We're stuck," she said. 

In a statement Thursday, CDC officials said the changes were driven by how the virus was spreading in different places, and how well the public health and health-care systems were functioning in dealing with new cases.

The change in travel advice from the public health agency was followed by a similar revision to the State Department’s global travel advisory. 

The State Department lifted its Global Level 4 Health Advisory, which was put in place on March 19, 2020, that advised U.S. citizens to avoid all international travel due to the global impact of COVID-19.

The State Department said in a statement that U.S. citizens should review the entire travel advisory for their destination and should continue exercising caution when abroad due to the unpredictable nature of the pandemic.

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