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What are the COVID-19 protocols at the 2024 Paris Olympics?

What are the COVID-19 protocols at the 2024 Paris Olympics?
So you get to Paris and now you have to get around. The good thing is you have options. Light rail is one of them that's brand new. Also *** really robust bus system that'll get you around. But if you want some pedal power bikes, just like at home, you can rent. We though will start underground. This is the second busiest metro in Europe and during the Olympics, it might just teeter near first. All right. So the map is your best friend. This is familiar just like New York, Boston. Also, they have the app city mapper type in where you wanna go takes you there tells you everything, you know, foolproof. They say that the subway covers more than 600,000 miles *** day. And fortunately, I just needed less than one. All right. So that's not that bad at all. If you just follow *** map or just an app, it'll get you through. But you have options. Maybe what you want is *** bicycle or throughout the streets, they make it so easy to get around. Going green is big in Paris right now and biking, the city of Light is quite popular. We can see all of the monument and uh it's *** friendly and uh good, uh, good activity to, uh, to visit Paris. It's busy but not intimidating because we've seen it all before New York. Except that here saying *** town or downtown, it's just *** name. So you need to make sure that you're in the right way or around and around town at the Arc De Triomphe, which can be dizzying but it all ends well from bikes to trains to cars. See there's so much hustle and bustle in life going on that you just, you get to point *** to point B in *** snap.
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What are the COVID-19 protocols at the 2024 Paris Olympics?
Five players on Australia's women's water polo team for the Paris Olympics tested positive for COVID-19 this week. Paris is the first Olympics since the Tokyo Summer Games in 2021 and Beijing Winter Olympics in 2022 were staged in COVID bubbles with rigorous testing protocols.Video above: A look at what it's like getting around Paris ahead of the 2024 OlympicsSo, what are the protocols for positive tests at the Games this year? A Paris 2024 spokesperson told CNN that the protocols recommend mask-wearing for people who test positive.“We regularly remind athletes and all other Games stakeholders of the good practices to adopt should they experience any respiratory symptoms: wearing a mask in the presence of others, limiting contacts and washing hands regularly with soap and water or using hand sanitiser,” the statement says.“Hand sanitiser stations can be found at all the residential areas and also the restaurant of the Olympic Village,” according to the statement. “We continue to carefully monitor the public health situation in France, in conjunction with the relevant government ministry.”Many of the national teams also may have their own safety protocols to protect their athletes, said Lucia Mullen, an associate scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and a member of the World Health Organization’s mass gathering expert group, which regularly works on these issues.“For the COVID-19 cases, as with other respiratory diseases and also other gastrointestinal diseases, they will really promote hand hygiene and other basic hygiene measures – so, keeping distance, reporting to the clinics to get tested if you are feeling unwell and certainly if you’re displaying symptoms,” Mullen said. “Then, of course, isolating if you do test positive.”The Australian water polo team is treating COVID-19 no differently than any other respiratory illness, said Anna Meares, the chef de mission for the Australian Olympic team.“This is a high-performance environment, so we are being diligent,” Meares said at a news conference Tuesday when the team’s first COVID-19 case was announced.“We’re also having the fellow teammates wear masks and just adhere to social distancing measures as well – meeting outside, those sorts of things,” she said.She added that, when respiratory illnesses occur, the person is isolated until their symptoms subside and testing comes back clear.“But I need to emphasize that we are treating COVID no differently to other bugs like the flu. This is not Tokyo,” Meares said, referring to the 2020 Tokyo Summer Games, which were delayed by a year due to the pandemic and held without in-person spectators.Although the world is no longer under a public health emergency due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Olympic Games come as a wave of COVID-19 infections has hit the United States. Even President Joe Biden recently tested positive for the disease.The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that, if you test positive for COVID-19, you stay home until you are fever-free without the help of fever-reducing medications for at least 24 hours and your symptoms have been improving for 24 hours. It then recommends wearing a mask around other people for the next five days.“We’re in a time period where COVID is still circulating. We are seeing increases of cases again,” Mullen said.“And we’re probably underreporting levels. A lot of countries are reducing their surveillance measures,” she added. “We are expecting that there will be some people traveling to the Games – whether it’s spectators or just to go visit Paris – that may not know they have COVID and be sick, and of course, spread it on to others.”The French capital is expected to welcome about 15 million tourists while it hosts the Olympic Games.Separate public health guidance for travelers attending the 2024 Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games was released last week by WHO, the French Ministry of Health and Prevention, Santé publique France and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.The guidance recommends checking your vaccination status against common infectious diseases including measles, whooping cough, polio and COVID-19.“Cases of measles are on the rise worldwide, including in Europe and in France,” the guidance notes. “Attending a mass gathering event increases your chances of being exposed to respiratory diseases, including whooping cough and COVID-19. If you have symptoms, such as a cough, fever or sore throat, stay at home or in your hotel if possible and consider wearing a mask when you leave your hotel or home.”

Five players on Australia's women's water polo team for the Paris Olympics tested positive for COVID-19 this week.

Paris is the first Olympics since the Tokyo Summer Games in 2021 and Beijing Winter Olympics in 2022 were staged in COVID bubbles with rigorous testing protocols.

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Video above: A look at what it's like getting around Paris ahead of the 2024 Olympics

So, what are the protocols for positive tests at the Games this year?

A Paris 2024 spokesperson told CNN that the protocols recommend mask-wearing for people who test positive.

“We regularly remind athletes and all other Games stakeholders of the good practices to adopt should they experience any respiratory symptoms: wearing a mask in the presence of others, limiting contacts and washing hands regularly with soap and water or using hand sanitiser,” the statement says.

“Hand sanitiser stations can be found at all the residential areas and also the restaurant of the Olympic Village,” according to the statement. “We continue to carefully monitor the public health situation in France, in conjunction with the relevant government ministry.”

Many of the national teams also may have their own safety protocols to protect their athletes, said Lucia Mullen, an associate scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and a member of the World Health Organization’s mass gathering expert group, which regularly works on these issues.

“For the COVID-19 cases, as with other respiratory diseases and also other gastrointestinal diseases, they will really promote hand hygiene and other basic hygiene measures – so, keeping distance, reporting to the clinics to get tested if you are feeling unwell and certainly if you’re displaying symptoms,” Mullen said. “Then, of course, isolating if you do test positive.”

The Australian water polo team is treating COVID-19 no differently than any other respiratory illness, said Anna Meares, the chef de mission for the Australian Olympic team.

“This is a high-performance environment, so we are being diligent,” Meares said at a news conference Tuesday when the team’s first COVID-19 case was announced.

“We’re also having the fellow teammates wear masks and just adhere to social distancing measures as well – meeting outside, those sorts of things,” she said.

She added that, when respiratory illnesses occur, the person is isolated until their symptoms subside and testing comes back clear.

“But I need to emphasize that we are treating COVID no differently to other bugs like the flu. This is not Tokyo,” Meares said, referring to the 2020 Tokyo Summer Games, which were delayed by a year due to the pandemic and held without in-person spectators.

Although the world is no longer under a public health emergency due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Olympic Games come as a wave of COVID-19 infections has hit the United States. Even President Joe Biden recently tested positive for the disease.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that, if you test positive for COVID-19, you stay home until you are fever-free without the help of fever-reducing medications for at least 24 hours and your symptoms have been improving for 24 hours. It then recommends wearing a mask around other people for the next five days.

“We’re in a time period where COVID is still circulating. We are seeing increases of cases again,” Mullen said.

“And we’re probably underreporting levels. A lot of countries are reducing their surveillance measures,” she added. “We are expecting that there will be some people traveling to the Games – whether it’s spectators or just to go visit Paris – that may not know they have COVID and be sick, and of course, spread it on to others.”

The French capital is expected to welcome about 15 million tourists while it hosts the Olympic Games.

Separate public health guidance for travelers attending the 2024 Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games was released last week by WHO, the French Ministry of Health and Prevention, Santé publique France and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.

The guidance recommends checking your vaccination status against common infectious diseases including measles, whooping cough, polio and COVID-19.

“Cases of measles are on the rise worldwide, including in Europe and in France,” the guidance notes. “Attending a mass gathering event increases your chances of being exposed to respiratory diseases, including whooping cough and COVID-19. If you have symptoms, such as a cough, fever or sore throat, stay at home or in your hotel if possible and consider wearing a mask when you leave your hotel or home.”