- Joined
- Aug 20, 2006
- Messages
- 3,578
- Reaction score
- 1,445
- Location
- Honolulu, HI
- Resorts Owned
- HGVC Las Vegas, HGVC Las Vegas on the Strip, HGVC Sea World, Misner Place
Agree. But, it is inaccurate or incomplete to say "one test with results that are negative needs to be what keeps you from the required 14 day quarantine." It is inaccurate because it ignores the CRITICAL point that the "one test" must be within 72 hours of arrival. You're ignoring that. But I'm not addressing keeping Hawaii free of COVID. I'm addressing a solution to the problem of potentially not having your test result within 72 hours of you boarding the plane. How to "know" it is okay to go anyway.
If you KNOW for sure you'll have the test result back in 1-2 days, great. We're on the same page. But if you cannot know that, which is often going to be the case, one may not want to head to Hawaii and risk landing and finding out someone was positive. Then you have the problems you described of potentially infecting others, and the problem of having to quarantine for 14 days in Hawaii. All I was trying to do was lay out a plan for helping make that a very unlikely thing to happen and still be able to go.
Where I got that from was your comment, "relying on a 2nd test on arrival." My entire post was about NOT "relying" on a test after arrival by knowing what those test results will be. So, instead of "relying" on that test, you are merely "waiting" for it. By taking an earlier test and quarantining before the "required" test you can know with a high degree of confidence that the "required" test (within 72 hours) will be negative, eliminating the risk of flying over without having your required test result.
It's not perfect, but it (I believe) greatly reduces your risk of a surprise positive test result while still allowing you to go.
OK, now I understand your focus was a plan for not getting the results back in 72 hours. My focus was keeping Hawaii as safe as possible. My nickel in this discussion comes from 2 different places. While I am currently residing in New York, I have been and still will be a tourist when I return to Hawaii. However, I now own a Condonmium in Honolulu so I look at this as a resident of Hawaii as well. I am not interested in just a safe enjoyable trip to Hawaii, I am interested in remaining safe in Hawaii for the future. From my perspecgtive whatever is set up must optimize the safety of the residents of Hawaii as well as getting the Hawaii Econcomy moving again. While we had plans for going to Hawaii in late 2020 and staying into the middle of 2021, we are now resigned to staying in New York until sometime in 2021.
As far as getting the results back in 72 hours or 5 days etc. Hawaii announced a "partnership" with CVS for the Coronavirus Testing. Well I don't know what that partnership was but from my perspective if Hawaii was speaking of exempting the quarantine with negative test results within 72 hours of departure, then CVS' end of the partnership HAD TO BE to providing the results within 72 hours. If CVS can't do that then what was the partnership? If CVS can only turn the test around with 5 days, and that is medically acceptable, then Hawaii needs to change the requirement for exempting the quarantine to 5 days. The medically acceptable term is important and I believe you are in a better position than I to address that.
The other testing and travel issue that I haven't heard discussed that concerns me is getting tested and then getting infected before your flight. Our flights to Hawaii have always been in the winter. I don't know how others handle this but even before the Coronavirus we would stay away from our Grandchildren and Large Events about a week before our flight so that we wouldn't catch the Flu or a Common Cold before a flight. In view of the Coronavirus I would hope everyone who flys would take that type of pre-flight precaution.