U.S. evacuees from China placed on 72-hour 'hold' at California military
base for medical evaluation
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[January 30, 2020]
By Omar Younis
(Reuters) - Nearly 200 Americans airlifted
from China in the midst of the coronavirus outbreak arrived on Wednesday
at a U.S. military base in California, where they will remain isolated
for at least 72 hours of medical evaluation, public health officials
said.
The group, mostly U.S. diplomats and their families, were evacuated from
Wuhan at the epicenter of the outbreak aboard a U.S.
government-chartered cargo jet that stopped to refuel in Alaska on
Tuesday night before flying on to March Air Reserve Base, about 60 miles
(97 km) east of Los Angeles.
Foreign governments have begun flying their citizens out of Wuhan as the
death toll has risen and the city has entered into a virtual quarantine,
with Chinese authorities trying to contain the virus.
The 195 passengers at March air base were medically screened by Chinese
government and U.S. State Department officials before boarding the plane
in Wuhan, and again during the refueling stop by a team from the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, CDC officials said.
All the passengers have agreed to remain voluntarily in special housing
at the military base, cordoned off from base personnel, for 72 hours.
"These people are not under federal quarantine orders," said Dr.
Christopher Braden, deputy director of the CDC's National Center for
Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases.
"I personally talked to them when they were disembarking and going
through their first screening checks. They were happy to be here. They
were very cooperative with the questions," Braden told a news conference
at the Riverside University Health System Medical Center, near the base.
"They want to protect themselves. They want to protect others."
NO ONE SHOWED SYMPTOMS
The U.S. evacuees, who underwent another round of screening on arrival
in California, will be given further medical evaluations, including a
blood test for exposure to the virus, over the next three days, the
officials said.
None of the arriving passengers has so far exhibited any signs of
illness such as fever, cough or other respiratory symptoms, the
officials said.
The screening in Alaska included a questionnaire to check for factors
that would deem them to have been at high risk of infection, including
exposure to someone diagnosed with coronavirus or close contact to
someone living with a person who was sick.
"There were no individuals who responded to the questions indicating
they were high-risk," said Dr. Nancy Knight, director of the CDC's
Division of Global Health Protection. "We are reassessing that now."
One individual on the original evacuation manifest was barred from
boarding the plane in China because the person had a fever.
The State Department ordered its personnel evacuated from the U.S.
Consulate in Wuhan and welcomed other American citizens onto the flight
because there was excess room on the plane, CDC officials said. The
group included an unspecified number of children, ranging from a
month-old infant to teenagers, they said.
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Women and children walks past personnel in protective clothing after
arriving on an aircraft, chartered by the U.S. State Department to
evacuate government employees and other Americans from the novel
coronavirus threat in the Chinese city of Wuhan, at March Air
Reserve Base in Riverside County, California, U.S., January 29,
2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake
The plan is to allow the evacuees to return to their homes once the
initial evaluation period is over, provided there is no indication
of exposure or illness, the officials said.
At that point, absent any symptoms or a positive test result, an
individual would be considered non-infectious and be permitted to
travel on public transportation without putting others at risk,
Braden said.
FREE TO LEAVE?
People who may be incubating the infection before any symptoms
appear are not believed to be contagious, Braden said.
Health authorities will continue "active monitoring" of all the
passengers through the end of a 14-day incubation period, and plans
are in place to isolate any individual who shows signs of illness
after going home.
If any evacuees test positive or fall ill in the next three days,
they would be transferred to the Riverside Medical Center for
isolation and treatment, and authorities would decide what measures
need to be taken for the rest of the group, Braden said.
Asked if someone in the group who tested negative before the 72-hour
hold was over would be free to leave the base early, Knight said
that would lead to a conversation that "would be discussed up to the
highest levels within the U.S. government."
"If we think a person is a danger to the community, we can institute
an individual quarantine for that person, and we will," Braden
added. "If we think it's risky, then we have the tools to protect
the public and we will use them."
So far, five cases of coronavirus have been diagnosed in the United
States, none of them fatal, Braden said. A further 165, other than
the plane passengers, are under evaluation.
"There's no indication we have any transmission from those cases,
and therefore the risk for people in the United States, we believe,
is low," Braden said.
(Reporting by Omar Younis; Additional reporting by Steve Gorman in
Culver City, Calif. and Andrew Hay in New Mexico; Writing by Steve
Gorman; Editing by Bill Tarrant, Rosalba O'Brien and Peter Cooney)
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