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Thanks, but where would you get the accommodation? I presume pilgrims have faced this problem.Yes, you would need to isolate - but you would have to book a private room with a private bathroom - and somehow arrange for someone to bring you food
Thanks, but where will you get accommodation if you need to declare you are positive. This issue must be faced constantly at present. A simple view of Covid statistics would indicate that somewhere up to 5% of pilgrims will catch Covid. Is the issue being ignored which I would not do.This website should be helpful
Spanish Tourism | Tourist information on Spain | spain.info
Tourist information about Spain: art, culture, museums, monuments, beaches, cities, fiestas, routes, cuisine, natural spaces in Spain | spain.infotravelsafe.spain.info
Also, if you test postive for Covid while in Galicia you should qualify for regional government's free Covid insurance
Galiciayou have to come for sure! - Galicia safe destination - GALICIA
If you come to Galicia, you’ll be safe for sure!During your holiday in Galicia, you’ll be covered by the new COVID-19 travel insurance.A destination is much more ...Much ...www.turismo.gal
I think that it depends a bit on each region. It seems that if you are in Galicia that you phone the number on the Galicia Covid insurance page and they should help you find a place. Each region has a number to call, though I don't know how much assistance each region gives to travelers who need a quarantine hotel.Thanks, but where will you get accommodation if you need to declare you are positive. This issue must be faced constantly at present. A simple view of Covid statistics would indicate that somewhere up to 5% of pilgrims will catch Covid. Is the issue being ignored which I would not do.
Thanks, this was helpful. I guess there will be some form of help in each region. I can understand if hostels or albergues refuse to take you in.I think that it depends a bit on each region. It seems that if you are in Galicia that you phone the number on the Galicia Covid insurance page and they should help you find a place. Each region has a number to call, though I don't know how much assistance each region gives to travelers who need a quarantine hotel.
There's an account from @Blaster here about his wife's experience with testing positive for Covid while on the Camino.
The account by @Blaster listed is very helpful and assuringI'm planning to walk the Frances in mid-August. I'll have had the 2nd Covid booster (4th Shot) plus the flu shot. Even at 71, I'm not worried from a health perspective. But if you catch Covid where do you self isolate? I presume the Albergue or Hostel wouldn't want you staying there for the 5 or 7 days?
If you test positive on a rapid antigen self test you should inform it by having a test done at a health center.Thanks all. So the upshot is that the requirements for self-isolating are confusing. It appears that if you do feel you have Covid then take a RA test and if the result is positive inform whomever where you are to contact the local health authorities. This should lead to help to find a place where you can self isolate. Again the length of time does not appear consistent and also the rules around who is a close contact is inconsistent.
Is this official or your view. This gets complicated because if you have covid and go wandering about to get a PCR test then you're not isolating. As a foreigner in Spain, you basically have no home, car, friends, or whatever to rely on..If you test positive on a rapid antigen self test you should inform it by having a test done at a health center.
It's my understanding that you need an "official" test report on order to later on get a recovery certificate.
Based on reports that I've read on the forum and elsewhere.Is this official or your view. This gets complicated because if you have covid and go wandering about to get a PCR test then you're not isolating. As a foreigner in Spain, you basically have no home, car, friends, or whatever to rely on..
Update from Ce in Burgos - isolating with Covid
Just to pass on live info for her.
Ce last Monday self Rapid Antigen Tested in an albergue past Burgos and was positive having picked it up along the way from SJPdP although she is triple vaxxed - her symptome were correspondingly mild with cough, running nose and a headache for 2 days.
She did the right thing, informed the others who rushed out the door!
The Hospitalero helped her find a small hotel that took her (2 other hotels declined) and arranged a taxi there.
She called the Health no but they were not very helpful.
She isolated for the 7 days.
This Mon she paid her bill and went to find a doctor to give her a certificate. One wouldn't see her and she went to a public hospital. They told her to come back in 2 hours which she did.
They gave her a RAT test that was faintly positive. She offered a photo of the previous RAT test she did herself but they would not accept it and she was told to isolate further for 2-3 days and she would get a call!
The Health call is slow coming and she is nearly there and will use her own RAT test to ensure she is clear.
The lesson looks like - if you are +ve on your own test you must get a witnessed test from a Pharmacy, Doctor or Hospital to start the quarantine...
Only that starts the isolation clock officially ticking for a 7 day isolation.
She had very mild symptoms and is ready to go again.
There will be quite a few on the Way who have symptoms or are shedding but do not test and do not report or stop so common sense precautions are wise.
Thanks, yes Ce yesterday passed through Sarria having trained forward from Burgos to where she would have been - after 5 Camnios "has the T shirt" and doesn't feel compelled to walk every step - still carring her pack and feeling ok. She had to isolate another 2-1 days when the hospital would accept her RAT test ( only a Chemist, Doctor or Hospital test is considered official" see my post above.
She is fine and going well.
Thanks. I guess the information is changing regularlyThis may be of interest:
Covid-19: Spain scraps self-isolation for asymptomatic and mild cases
From Monday March 28th, people in Spain who test positive for Covid-19 but are asymptomatic or have mild symptoms will no longer be required to quarantine for seven days.www.thelocal.es
The article says that the self isolation for mild and asymptomatic cases already ended on March 28th.This may be of interest:
Covid-19: Spain scraps self-isolation for asymptomatic and mild cases
From Monday March 28th, people in Spain who test positive for Covid-19 but are asymptomatic or have mild symptoms will no longer be required to quarantine for seven days.www.thelocal.es
Thanks, but high risk, which includes those over 60, still need to isolate.The article says that the self isolation for mild and asymptomatic cases already ended on March 28th.
Thanks for the info. The Allianz insurance sounds great. I bought AIG’s Travel Guard while booking with United. The policy doesn’t mention Covid related services though. I will check w/ them, if they don’t, I will get the Allianz coverage. Does it specifically mention of Covid related expenses?For USians only: I buy travel insurance from Allianz. They currently cover Covid-related trip cancellation or interruption, Covid-related medical expenses, and Covid-related isolation up to €100/day for a certain number of days that I recall being adequate. The rep suggested contacting them even if covered by the Galician policy, as they usually have lists of hotels that offer cost-effective isolation. Allianz is also very good if you are over 65 with a Medigap supplement of lifetime 50k OVERSEAS coverage -- because they step in as primary insurer, so you don't exhaust your Medigap. Other insurers like World Nomads act as secondary insurers.
Something to consider when you're outside Galicia.
You have to ask them. On their home page they make a vague reference but it's hard to tease out. NB: Because I live in NY State, their standard covid coverage doesn't apply, but they step in and offer "parity."Thanks for the info. The Allianz insurance sounds great. I bought AIG’s Travel Guard while booking with United. The policy doesn’t mention Covid related services though. I will check w/ them, if they don’t, I will get the Allianz coverage. Does it specifically mention of Covid related expenses?
I also bought coverage from InterMundial too. Need to check if it includes coverage for Covid.
What is the Allianz website?For USians only: I buy travel insurance from Allianz. They currently cover Covid-related trip cancellation or interruption, Covid-related medical expenses, and Covid-related isolation up to €100/day for a certain number of days that I recall being adequate. The rep suggested contacting them even if covered by the Galician policy, as they usually have lists of hotels that offer cost-effective isolation. Allianz is also very good if you are over 65 with a Medigap supplement of lifetime 50k OVERSEAS coverage -- because they step in as primary insurer, so you don't exhaust your Medigap. Other insurers like World Nomads act as secondary insurers.
Something to consider when you're outside Galicia.
What is the Allianz website?
Not quite (only 7 + 2-3) .
Day 1 - she did her own 2 RAT tests and found she was positive for Covid (probably caught it a few days before in another Albergue).
Ce informed the other pilgrims at the Albergue that morning and they were quickly out the door and back on their walk - including a man that had been suffering a cough for a few days!
Ce quickly reported to the Hospitalero, who was great and helped her - after two hotels refused to take her for isolation in Burgos, she found one that did and organised a taxi to get Ce there.
Ce tried to call a health hotline there but was unsuccessful being understood.
She self-isolated for 7 days.
Ce paid her bill and went to a Dr in Burgos for a cert - they wouldn't see her so she went to a hospital - they said they were too busy and come back in 2 hours!
She did and they gave her a RAT test that was faintly positive (much less than her earlier one), and said she had to isolate.
She showed a photo of her earlier tests and they said they could only accept a test from a chemist, Dr or Hospital and to now self isolate for 2-3 days and someone would call her.
She got back to the previous hotel who were very helpful, gave her her own room back and 3 days later (10 in all) after a -ve self RAT test and no call back, she went back on the walk.
She went forward by train and met up with her Camino family again and walked into Santiago, had a rest and for fun, went to a Corona and is walking back again to Santiago.
As a triple vaxxed person she only had a couple of days of a cough and headache at the beginning and said she feels fine.
Looks like many Peregrinos may be walking with Covid symptoms but are not treating them as anything more than the old flu, so if you need to take precautions around others.
If you are unwell, get an "official test - Chemist, Doc or Hospital at the beginning".
The rules have probably changed by now re isolation periods and close contact rules so keep checking.
It would be great if Pilgrims are give some helpful literature along the way for what to do if unwell but it is probably changing so quickly (masks indoors are about to disappear) but a working hotline telephone number might be helpful?
Buen Camino
I got a medical clearance letter based on cdc requirement that 1O full days had passed from onset of symptoms, and I had been symptom free 5 days. My illness was very very mild, like having 3% of a head cold.Currently in Leon with positive and only symptom is fatigue. I couldn't put in more than 10 km.
I am contacting airline tomorrow to double check. From US embassy in Spain....
https://es.usembassy.gov/covid-19-information/
Recovery certificates that are issued at least 11 days after the first positive COVID test, and up to a maximum of 180 days after the date of sampling, are accepted as valid. The COVID tests accepted are those authorized by the European Commission and must have been performed by healthcare professionals after October 1, 2021. Passengers with a Recovery Certificate other than an EU Digital COVID Certificate or equivalent must also provide documentary proof of the diagnostic test from which the Recovery Certificate is derived.
Crossing my fingers that I may get negative test because my flight only gives me 8 days. For others....get a PCR test asap to get the clock running. I tried two self tests and they we negative.
Hoping that you made it home @Sitkapilgrim and that you are feeling fine by now. And I am very happy to learn that your Lana from Sigüenza seems to have been a success!British airways is letting me on their plane to London now. They can’t say whether British Airways in London will let me fly on to the the States tomorrow.
I walked the Camino for 6 weeks last August and used Booking.com to make all of my lodging arrangements. I booked (90+% of the time) single rooms with private bathrooms. This was to help avoid getting COVID to begin with. I would hope you could do this to book a place to stay if you were to get COVID. Good luck on your adventure.Thanks, but where would you get the accommodation? I presume pilgrims have faced this problem.
Thanks. Now waiting until next AprilI walked the Camino for 6 weeks last August and used Booking.com to make all of my lodging arrangements. I booked (90+% of the time) single rooms with private bathrooms. This was to help avoid getting COVID to begin with. I would hope you could do this to book a place to stay if you were to get COVID. Good luck on your adventure.
I started my isolation yesterday y Santoña (CDN)Thanks, but where would you get the accommodation? I presume pilgrims have faced this problem.
i started my isolation yesterday in Santoña (CDN) and got info from the tourism office in Laredo. I also found Just Eat, a food delivery service. Fortunately I brought Test Kits and Cold FX with me, and Advil for the fever. For the first 24 hrs I just slept and now am more alert. So things are not so bad other than being more expensive!Thanks, but where would you get the accommodation? I presume pilgrims have faced this problem.
Just got back from the CF and honestly this is probably the right decision. A lot of people have given you well meaning advice, but there is so much more to it than simply calling the health department. For the people I met who had gotten Covid, no one had anyone hold their hand through the process. On the camino odds are you will be in a small town, so your first priority when you become ill is to figure out how to get to a larger town/city in order to have access to medical care in case things go south. Pilgrims I met who got Covid had to take a bus or taxi to a larger town or were given a ride by a hostel owner. They knew they were putting people at risk but there wasn’t much they could do beyond informing people and wearing a mask. Second, you have to get private accommodations and be in a place where you can get meals delivered. Private accommodations (with private bathroom) can be easily booked in hostels or hotels on booking.com in larger cities (smaller towns are often sold out of private accommodations), but of course are expensive. Lastly, you might miss your flight home or other bookings and may not get refunded. That is also expensive. So, overall it’s just super expensive and complicated to get Covid along the camino. You get sick and all of a sudden have to worry about a bunch of details like “how am I going to eat?” That’s really anxiety-provoking. Plus, it’s going to be soooooo hot in August. April will be much better! Buen camino!Thanks. Now waiting until next April
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