Coronavirus

New Quarantine Advice for Post-infection, Vaccination in NH

Residents who are fully vaccinated against the coronavirus or were previously infected no longer need to quarantine after being exposed to an infected person or after traveling

COVID-19 vaccine is stored at -80 degrees celsius in the pharmacy at Roseland Community Hospital

New Hampshire residents who are fully vaccinated against the coronavirus or were previously infected no longer need to quarantine after being exposed to an infected person or after traveling, according to new guidance from the state Division of Public Health Services.

Under previous guidance, anyone who was exposed to the virus was advised to quarantine for 14 days, while those returning to New Hampshire after traveling outside of England were told to quarantine for 10 days.

An update issued Monday says those quarantine periods are unnecessary if someone is at least 14 days past their second dose of the vaccine or if they are within 90 days of being infected.

The guidance urges people with prior infections to also get vaccinated, however. And officials continue to discourage any nonessential travel, even for those who are vaccinated or had previous infections, because “protection is not 100%, durability of immunity is still unknown, and there are new circulating strains” of the virus that are being investigated.

More than 51,000 people have tested positive for the virus in New Hampshire, including 711 cases announced Monday that included totals from several days. A total of 869 people have died, with no new deaths announced Monday.

The seven-day rolling average of daily new cases in New Hampshire has risen over the past two weeks from 610 on Dec. 27 to 736 on Sunday.

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