"It's scary and will be a game changer," said Stanford Infectious Disease Physician Catherine Blish.
[Ads /]
The data released in this report suggests the Delta variant is just as transmissible as Chickenpox -- and even more transmissible than Ebola, Smallpox, SARS, the common cold, and the Spanish flu.
RELATED: CDC warns Delta variant is as infectious as chickenpox; vaccinated people can transmit
As a CDC document states "the war has changed."
"I'm not sure I see a way out of this short of going back to an indoor mask mandate 100 percent of the time," said Dr. Blish.
UCSF's Dr. Bob Wachter agrees saying an indoor mask mandate is imminent for the Bay Area.
"I think their fingers have to be pretty close to the trigger on this one," he said.
VIDEO: 'The war has changed' - CDC warns of delta variant's extreme contagiousness, severity
'The war has changed' - CDC warns of Delta variant's extreme contagiousness, severity
The CDC report highlights data from an outbreak where 469 COVID cases were identified among people who traveled to Barnstable County, MA in early to mid-July. 74 percent of those infected were fully vaccinated and carried the same amount of virus as those unvaccinated.
[Ads /]
"The amount of virus in the people who were vaccinated was equivalent to those who were unvaccinated," said Blish.
Dr. Wachter tweeted this discovery is indicating breakthrough cases will spread the virus "more readily than we previously thought."
"When I walk into the Safeway, it's far more likely the person standing next to me has COVID but doesn't know it," said Wachter. "So you're going to see more breakthrough infections in people who were vaccinated."
RELATED: Delta variant described as 'new beast' as UCSF doctors gear up for potential peak this October
The report also mentions the period of infection stemming from the Delta variant may be longer, indicating an infected person may be able to transmit the virus for 18 days, rather than 13 days. Wachter says this could raise questions about adding more quarantine and testing requirements.
UCSF's Dr. Peter Chin-Hong agrees.
[Ads /]
"It is possible there may be longer quarantine requirements for certain individuals, particularly those who are immunocompromised and unvaccinated for example, as they may produce virus for longer," he said. "Right now, with the information we know that a two week interval should suffice."
As far as COVID-19 testing, Dr. Blish says we should all start thinking about getting regularly tested.
"Particularly given the new data that people who are vaccinated infected at least in their nose and a lot of those people are asymptomatic," she said. "I don't really see any reason not to go back to much more regular testing."
"How often?" ABC7's Stephanie Sierra asked.
"Ideally, at least once or twice a week."
- Map shows which counties can, can't reopen under reopening tiers
- Cheat sheet: What you can and can't do after being fully vaccinated
- How to register for a COVID-19 vaccine in every Bay Area county
- Map shows everywhere you can get a COVID-19 test in the Bay Area
- Interactive map shows what's closed and what's reopening in the San Francisco Bay Area
- Data tracker: Coronavirus cases, deaths, hospitalizations in every Bay Area county
- Third stimulus check calculator: See how much you could get
- COVID-19 Diaries: Personal stories of Bay Area residents during pandemic
- Get the latest updates on California EDD, stimulus checks, unemployment benefits
- Coronavirus origin: Where did COVID-19 come from?
- What is a COVID-19 genetic, antigen and antibody test?
- What does COVID-19 do to your body and why does it spread so easily?
- Coronavirus Timeline: Tracking major moments of COVID-19 pandemic in San Francisco Bay Area
- Coronavirus Doctor's Note: Dr. Alok Patel gives his insight into COVID-19 pandemic