The cases raise concerns about the spread of the flu-like virus that
broke out in the central Chinese city of Wuhan at the end of last
year and has killed 106 people and infected more than 2,800 people.
It spreads in droplets from coughs and sneezes and has an incubation
period of up to 14 days.
In one of the first cases of person-to-person transmission outside
China, a 33-year-old man apparently contracted the virus on Jan. 21
during a training session with a Chinese colleague, the ministry
said. The three additional patients were being monitored in
isolation at a clinic in Munich.
"A total of around 40 employees at the company have been identified
as potential close contacts. As a precaution, the people concerned
are to be tested on Wednesday," Bavaria's Health Minister Melanie
Huml said in a statement.
German car parts supplier Webasto [WEBA.UL] earlier on Tuesday said
an employee at its headquarters in Stockdorf, Bavaria, had become
infected following the visit of an employee from China.
A day earlier it said an employee from Shanghai tested positive for
the virus upon returning to China.
Confirmation of any sustained human-to-human spread of the virus
outside of China, as well as any documented deaths, would bolster
the case for reconvening the World Health Organisation's Emergency
Committee to consider again whether to declare a public health
emergency of international concern.
The independent panel last week twice declined to declare an
international emergency.
Outside of China there have now been 45 confirmed cases in 13
countries, with no deaths so far, the WHO's spokesman Christian
Lindmeier told a briefing in Geneva on Tuesday.
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The WHO said a case in Vietnam involved human-to-human transmission
outside China and a Japanese official has said there was a suspected
case of human-to-human transmission there too.
WUHAN CONNECTION
Andreas Zapf, president of Bavaria's office for health and food
safety, said on Tuesday the first person infected was 33 years old,
lived in the district of Landsberg about 50 kilometres (31 miles)
west of Munich and had come into contact with a Chinese lady on Jan.
21.
Zapf said the Chinese woman was from Shanghai but her parents, who
are from the Wuhan region, had visited her a few days earlier.
He added that she had arrived in Germany on Jan. 19, appearing not
to have any symptoms, but began to feel ill on her flight home on
Jan. 23. She sought medical treatment after landing and tested
positive for coronavirus.
When that information was relayed back to the German company, a male
employee said he felt like he had flu over the weekend and was on
Monday advised to get medical treatment.
The head doctor at the clinic where the man is being treated told a
news conference the patient was awake and responsive and he did not
think the man's life was at risk.
Health Minister Jens Spahn said the risk to people's health in
Germany from the coronavirus remained low.
(Reporting by Michelle Martin in Berlin; Additional reporting by
Madeline Chambers in Berlin, Alexander Huebner in Munich, Kanishka
Singh in Bengaluru and Kenneth Maxwell in Tokyo; Editing by
Alexandra Hudson and Marguerita Choy)
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