key: cord-0954259-d5qn65k0 authors: Petersen, Eskild; McCloskey, Brian; Hui, David S; Kock, Richard; Ntoumi, Francine; Memish, Ziad A; Kapata, Nathan; Azhar, Esam I; Pollack, Marjorie; Madoff, Larry C.; Hamer, Davidson H; Nachega, Jean B; Pshenichnaya, N.; Zumla, Alimuddin title: COVID-19 travel restrictions and the International Health Regulations – call for an open debate on easing of travel restrictions date: 2020-04-17 journal: International journal of infectious diseases : IJID : official publication of the International Society for Infectious Diseases DOI: 10.1016/j.ijid.2020.04.029 sha: ffe9bcda481df1bda88f31fa19ce71b90314dbfe doc_id: 954259 cord_uid: d5qn65k0 nan Correspondence: Eskild Petersen: email: eskild.petersen@gmail.com The COVID-19 pandemic caused by the novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) has caused national governments worldwide to mandate several generic infection control measures such as physical distancing, self-isolation, and closure of non-essential shops, restaurants schools, among others. Some models suggest physical distancing would have to persist for 3 months to mitigate the peak effects on health systems and could be required on an intermittent basis for 12 to 18 months [Flaxman S et al. 2020 ]. Apart from these control measures travel restrictions during the early phase of the China outbreak were useful to confine it to Wuhan, the major source of the outbreak [Kraeamer et al, 2020] although ultimately these measures did not prevent the spread of COVID-19 to other regions of China. The global spread of the SARS-CoV-2 has clearly been associated with regional and international travel which has contributed to the pandemic [Candido et al. 2020 ]. To limit cross-border spread, both regionally and globally, many countries have swiftly adopted sweeping measures, including full lockdowns of shops, companies, shutting down airports, imposing travel restrictions and completely sealing their borders, to contain transmission [Gostin LO et al 2020] . The grounding of international travel as part of the global response to prevent spread has caused profound disruption of travel and trade and has threatened the survival of many airlines, travel companies, and associated businesses. Travel bans to affected areas or denial of entry to passengers coming from affected areas are usually not effective in preventing the importation of cases but have a significant economic and social impact. Since the WHO declaration of a public health emergency of international concern on 30 January 2020, and as of 8 th April, 2020, 180 countries have reported to WHO additional health measures that significantly interfere with international traffic in relation to travel to and from China or other countries, ranging from denial of entry of passengers, visa restrictions or quarantine for returning travellers [WHO 2020a ]. To re-start the world economy again it will be important to ease travel restrictions as soon as possible. Whilst travel restriction measures that significantly interfere with international traffic may be justified at the beginning of an outbreak, since they allow countries time to implement effective preparedness measures based on careful risk assessment, they should be based on a reasoned scientific evaluation of the available evidence on their possible effectiveness. They should also be time-limited and reconsidered and revisited on a regular basis as better information on both the effectiveness and the socio-economic impact of the measures emerges. Thus an open debate is now required on when and how they need to be lifted. This debate could usefully be framed in the context of the International Health Regulations. The purpose of the WHO International Health Regulations [WHO, 2020b] is to 'prevent, protect against, control and provide a public health response to the international spread of disease in ways that are commensurate with and restricted to public health risks, and which The WHO's advice, based on many years of international outbreak response, was considered by many to be reasonable and evidence-based but the recommendation on travel restrictions has not been heeded by governments and politicians in the face of rapid spread of COVID-19 between countries. This highlights the apparent dissonance between scientific advice and political realities [and indeed public perception]. As many countries are now approaching the peak or flattening phase of the epidemic curve this dissonance will again become forefront and an open debate is required on lifting of travel restrictions. Several questions need to be considered: Why have several countries systematically ignored WHO's advice on not restricting travel during the COVID-19 outbreak? Is it that the advice was considered wrong or that the advice was inconsistent with the public perception that closing borders was a "sensible" thing to do? 2. Given that countries have unilaterally made decisions to close down international travel, how can we get better science and evidence into decisions about lifting these restrictions as the outbreak resolves so that international trade and the global economy can start to recover? It seems inevitable that countries will move at different speeds to these decisions, reflecting the different evolution of the outbreak in each country. Promoting a risk-based approach to lifting the travel restrictions that might vary from country to country could provide a way forward but it will need a degree of international coordination to avoid a random, possibly chaotic, certainly confusing, and probably ineffective process. This coordination should come from WHO in line with the mandate given to WHO by the member states through the IHR. Countries with still very few cases and potential to arrest and eliminate the few cases that they have, should not open up travel without very strict quarantine for arrivals. This could reduce the conflict between science-based advice and political decision making. What mitigating measures will be available to reduce the risk of a resurgence of the outbreak as public health measures, including travel restrictions, are eased? In particular what role (if any) will PCR and immunity (serology) testing play in managing the impact of lifting restrictions? It will be imperative that countries easing restrictions (whether social or physical distancing or travel restrictions) have in place resources and capacity for detecting, testing and quarantining all new cases arising as well as tracing and tracking all contacts. There has been evidence of global capacity issues with PCR tests and possibly of market influencing to secure testing capacity in some countries. Should there be, within the spirit of the recent G20 statement [G20, 2020], international cooperation facilitated by WHO to ensure testing capacity is made available in a managed way to countries as and when they need it most? Indeed, the WHO the 7 th April certified the first two PCR tests [WHO, 2020c] and advice on the use of point-of-care tests [WHO, 2020d] The majority of persons who have been infected SARS-CoV-2 recover and appear to be immune and non-infectious [To KK-W et al. 2020 ] although recurrence have been reported but need further confirmation [Zhou L et al. 2020 ]. We do not know for how long such J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f 5 immunity lasts but neutralizing antibodies was found more than two years after infection with SARS-CoV [Wu LP et al. 2007] . A validated, specific and sensitive test to detect SARS-CoV-2specific-IgG is urgently required to support countries' efforts to control the outbreak. There is currently no evidence to recommend serology as an immunity passport and we do not have any long-term data about how effective and long-lasting immunity might be but there will undoubtedly be pressure to implement such measures. It would be helpful if this was coordinated to ensure a consistent approach globally, with consistent standards and requirements, and such an approach is also clearly within WHO's IHR mandate. As SARS-CoV-2 continues to spread across different geographical regions, with different epidemiological patterns being seen, we await how it will evolve over time and across seasons [in both the north and south hemisphere]. Meanwhile ongoing proactive surveillance should be maintained and the search for effective serological tests, treatments and vaccines be pursued vigorously. As we start to emerge from the initial phase of the outbreak, international cooperation, collaboration, leadership and authority will be critical -where will it come from? Author declarations: All authors have a specialist interest in emerging and re-emerging pathogens and report no potential conflicts. Routes for COVID-19 importation in Brazil Estimating the number of infections and the impact of non-pharmaceutical interventions on COVID-19 in 11 European countries. 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