Number of U.S. coronavirus cases of unknown origin climbs to four
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[February 29, 2020]
By Steve Holland and Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. public health
officials said they have identified four "presumptive" coronavirus cases
believed to have emerged from community transmission of the infection,
signaling a turning point in efforts to contain the disease in the
United States.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued a
statement on Friday citing three such cases newly diagnosed by state
public health authorities - one each in California, Oregon and
Washington state.
If confirmed by the CDC, together with a previous case of unknown origin
announced on Wednesday in California, that would bring to four the
number of diagnosed individuals in the United States with no history of
travel to a country where the virus is circulating and no close contact
with an infected person.
The three latest patients were diagnosed based on results obtained in
their respective states from CDC-supplied test kits and are considered
"presumptive positive" cases pending CDC confirmatory testing, the U.S.
agency said.
A fourth presumptive positive was also announced in Washington state on
Friday, but that one is "likely travel-related," the CDC said.
Still, the three latest cases of apparent community transmission, plus
the one identified earlier this week in California, are a sign the virus
is now spreading within at least four separate locations up and down the
U.S. West Coast.
They span nearly 900 miles from California's Silicon Valley region in
Santa Clara County north to the Puget Sound near Seattle.
"What we know now is that the virus is here, present at some level, but
we still don't know to what degree," said Dr. Sara Cody, the chief
public health officer for Santa Clara County, speaking of the newly
diagnosed case there, the latest of three in her county and the 10th
statewide.
Even as confirmation was pending there, the CDC sent a team to assist
local authorities in tracing close contacts the patient had with others
in a bid to curb transmission.
Until this week, the CDC had counted 15 confirmed cases in six states as
having been detected through the U.S. public health system since Jan.
21, none fatal. Most were contracted by individuals while traveling in
China, where the outbreak originated. Only two person-to-person
transmissions were documented among them, both between married couples.
An additional 47 cases have been confirmed among people recently
repatriated from abroad, either from the Diamond Princess cruise ship
quarantined in Japan or from Wuhan, China, the epicenter of the
outbreak, according to the CDC.
MASKS, GLOVES AND TEST KITS
The latest flurry of cases came as the Trump administration said the
United States would invoke a federal defense law to boost production of
masks, gloves, gowns and other items needed to protect medical personnel
from exposure.
Around the world, more countries are reporting new infections, companies
have curtailed travel and global stock markets have tumbled.
President Donald Trump said at the White House on Friday the United
States will decide "very soon" about whether to bar entry to travelers
from countries other than China where community transmission has
emerged.
At a rally in South Carolina on Friday night, Trump defended his
administration’s response to the coronavirus outbreak and accused
Democrats of politicizing the disease.
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A support operations tent is seen at a earmarked quarantine site for
healthy people potentially exposed to novel coronavirus, behind
Washington State Public Health Laboratories in Shoreline, north of
Seattle, Washington, U.S. February 28, 2020. REUTERS/David Ryder
“This is their new hoax,” Trump said at the event, held a day before
the state’s Democratic presidential primary.
The U.S. State Department has issued travel advisories for several
nations and on Friday it said Americans should reconsider travel to
Italy, where nearly 900 coronavirus cases have been confirmed. A
similar warning was issued earlier this week for South Korea, which
has hundreds of infections.
A government task force appointed by Trump to deal with the threat
will meet at the White House on Saturday morning, according to an
administration official.
Latest figures from China, where the outbreak started late last
year, indicated that nearly 80,000 people have been infected, with
more than 2,800 deaths. The World Health Organization reported 57
deaths in 46 other countries.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, who heads the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, said in a closed-door briefing in the U.S.
House of Representatives that sustained spread of the coronavirus
meant there would be many more infections in the United States,
according to a source.
Fauci warned lawmakers the country lacked enough testing resources,
the source said on condition of anonymity. The CDC said it has
revised its criteria for who should be tested and is ramping up
testing capabilities.
"Our goal is to have every state and local health department online
and doing their own testing by the end of next week," CDC official
Nancy Messonier told reporters.
A vaccine may take up to 18 months to develop, health officials have
said.
The United States has decided to postpone a meeting with leaders of
Southeast Asian countries it had planned to host on March 14 in Las
Vegas because of worries about the outbreak.
U.S. and global stocks plummeted as rattled investors braced for the
prospect that a pandemic could further dent an already slowing world
economy.
The S&P 500 <.SPX> fell for the seventh straight day on Friday,
suffering its biggest weekly drop since the 2008 global financial
crisis. Stocks cut losses right at the end of the session. The Dow
Jones Industrial Average <.DJI> fell 1.4%.
Trump this week said the coronavirus risk to Americans remained
"very low," but he has been increasingly alarmed by the reaction of
the U.S. stock market, which he considers a barometer of the
economy's health.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Steve
Holland, Richard Cowan, David Morgan, Susan Heavey, and Makini Brice
in Washington; Additional reporting by Ginger Gibson in North
Charleston, South Carolina, Howard Schneider in Fort Smith,
Arkansas, Lisa Lambert, Jeff Mason, Eric Beech and Steve Holland in
Washington and Jonathan Allen, Michael Erman, Hilary Russ and Sinead
Carew in New York; Writing by Paul Simao, Ted Hesson and Steve
Gorman; Editing by Alistair Bell, Grant McCool and; Louise Heavens)
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