sun starved Gayle
TUG Member

Hawaii may require travelers have COVID booster shot to be 'fully vaccinated'
Hawaii may require visitors to the state receive a COVID-19 vaccine booster if they want to skip quarantine.
No. Not for travel to Hawaii.Article says rule to go into effect January 24.
Article is dated Jan 17. I read 2 weeks from now or Jan 31.
And every other Mainland news source. There are the same people that made it should like the entirety of the Big Island was going to explode or sink into the ocean when the last eruption started.Shoddy reporting by ABC, as explained above.
Not sure the date of this interview, but it was clearly before Dec 31.And every other Mainland news source. There are the same people that made it should like the entirety of the Big Island was going to explode or sink into the ocean when the last eruption started.
This statement is simply not accurate:
"Hawaii will likely require visitors to the state to have received a COVID-19 vaccine booster if they want to skip quarantine."
Best to trust local news sources for this type of information.
They also make it sound like you won't be able to travel to Hawai`i if you are not vaccinated with a booster. There is absolutely no indication from official sources own Hawai`i that the option to have a pre-test prior to arrival is going to be eliminated.
As of this moment, there has still been no official date for the implementation of the booster requirement.
Lt. Governor Dr. Green has been pushing for this for weeks.
It was Dec. 27th 2021Not sure the date of this interview, but it was clearly before Dec 31.
The goal is to keep hospitalizations at a manageable level. Over the summer Hawai`i was about two dozen beds away from having to ration medical care. For a while the Big Island had arrival testing them switched to random percentage testing and then it was eliminated.I guess by adding a booster requirement for use of vaccines as the method of being exempt from quarantine they hope/expect to reduce the risk of the person needing hospital care in Hawaii. Testing 3 days before is probably the weak link, however. If you are not vaccinated at all you can still come, and with omicron you have a couple days + airport + airplane + airport + Hawaii opportunities to become infected while there and are far MORE likely to need a hospital. Rather than adding booster (or in addition to it) I’d probably have tightened up a lot on those not fully vaccinated. Test closer to flight. Test on arrival. Test 1-2 days after arrival. Something like that.
Exactly. Visitors are at least either vaccinated or tested. We shop late if able to avoid crowds. Stay away from the beaches on weekends. If locals would stay away from large groups for a while we would be in much better shape. over 6000 new cases yesterday. Big Island reached 2.5% infection rate. So far the hospital capacities are doing ok. The labor force on the other hand is taking quite a hit.We were on Oahu i early December, took a private island tour. We had interesting conversation with the guide, he was more afraid of unvaccinated locals than the tourists he knew were vaxxed.
I am not now and have never been too convinced that the pre-travel testing option is very effective, even more so now with omicron and it's shorter incubation time. The hospitals are doing okay because a lot of people are vaccinated, many of those that are not are also younger and less likely to be hospitalized, and omicron is less severe in many people. Collectively, that greatly reduces the hospital concerns even with the large number of cases.Exactly. Visitors are at least either vaccinated or tested. We shop late if able to avoid crowds. Stay away from the beaches on weekends. If locals would stay away from large groups for a while we would be in much better shape. over 6000 new cases yesterday. Big Island reached 2.5% infection rate. So far the hospital capacities are doing ok. The labor force on the other hand is taking quite a hit.
If you look at the data for percentage of arrival case contributions they have remained constant between 3% (delta and earlier and 4% currently. Visitor rates have remained unchanged the entire time at 1%. In any case they remaina small factor with poor resident behavior (community spread - parties and gatherings) being our biggest problem.I am not now and have never been too convinced that the pre-travel testing option is very effective, even more so now with omicron and it's shorter incubation time. ...
While not what some want to say, that doesn't appear to be in doubt at all. I suspect a visitor/tourist is a lot more likely to CATCH it in Hawaii than BRING it to Hawaii.If you look at the data for percentage of arrival case contributions they have remained constant between 3% (delta and earlier and 4% currently. Visitor rates have remained unchanged the entire time at 1%. In any case they remaina small factor with poor resident behavior (community spread - parties and gatherings) being our biggest problem.
Yep. Or in an airport on the way home. We are fortunate that all or our flights have had no mainland stops. Most everyone is vaccinated and nearly all that aren't are tested (within 72 hours coming home and 10 days going - hope they didn't catch it here)I suspect a visitor/tourist is a lot more likely to CATCH it in Hawaii than BRING it to Hawaii.
I read a piece recently about the "safest" place to sit on a plane. It basically addressed the obvious -- from any given seat, how many others are there within a certain distance from you. Worst was a middle seat on a group of 3, typical economy seating. You have 3 behind you, 3 in front of you, and one on either side. 8 people in close proximity. Best is first or last row of first/business, window seat. Only 3 near you, and they are farther away.Yep. Or in an airport on the way home. We are fortunate that all or our flights have had no mainland stops. Most everyone is vaccinated and nearly all that aren't are tested (within 72 hours coming home and 10 days going - hope they didn't catch it here)
Our next few flights are 2 in 2/3 or 2/4/2 premium extra space... Worst was a middle seat on a group of 3, typical economy seating. ...
If on Hawaiian Air, make sure you bring some wired headphones or ear plugs. Or $4. I spent 15 min trying to figure out why WiFi didn't work on my iPad. Turned out they didn't use WiFi, they had the old fashioned screens you'd pull up from between the seats. My Apple Airpods were not much help.Our next few flights are 2 in 2/3 or 2/4/2 premium extra space![]()