Journal Pioneer

U.S. confirms its eighth case

Pentagon to provide quarantine housing

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U.S. health officials Saturday confirmed an eighth case of the fast-spreading new coronaviru­s in the United States and the Pentagon said it would provide housing for people arriving from overseas who might need to be quarantine­d.

The latest U.S. patient, who is in Massachuse­tts, recently returned from Hubei province in central China, the epicentre of the outbreak, a spokeswoma­n for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said in an emailed statement. The person was not identified, and no other details were provided.

The flu-like coronaviru­s, which is believed to have originated in a market that traded illegally in wildlife in Hubei’s provincial capital Wuhan, has so far resulted in 304 deaths in China, state broadcaste­r CCTV said early Sunday in China. Confirmed cases of the virus have been reported in 27 other nations, according to the CDC.

All but one of the patients in the United States was believed to have contracted the disease while they were travelling in the Wuhan area. U.S. officials this week reported the first human-tohuman transmissi­on of the disease in the United States in Illinois.

Concerns about the virus spurred the Trump administra­tion to declare a public health emergency and bar entry to the United States for foreign nationals who have recently visited China.

In addition, U.S. citizens who have travelled within the past two weeks to Hubei will be subject to a mandatory quarantine of 14 days, believed to be the incubation period of the virus, officials said.

Americans who visited other parts of mainland

China will undergo special health screening upon their return, followed by up to 14 days of “monitored self-quarantine,” under the temporary restrictio­ns.

In a statement Saturday, the Pentagon said Defense Secretary Mark Esper approved a request for assistance from the Department of Health and Human Services for housing support for 1,000 people who may be subject to quarantine on arrival from overseas.

Health officials had asked the Defense Department to provide several facilities capable of housing at least 250 people in individual rooms through Feb. 29.

The Pentagon said four military installati­ons have been selected: two in California, one in Colorado, and one in Texas. It said Defense Department personnel would only provide housing support and HHS would be responsibl­e for all care and transporta­tion.

“DOD personnel will not be directly in contact with the evacuees and evacuees will not have access to any base location other than their assigned housing,” the Pentagon said.

QUARANTINE PROCEDURES

The first quarantine­s of U.S. citizens potentiall­y exposed to coronaviru­s in China began hours before the White

House announceme­nt on Friday.

Nearly 200 Americans evacuated earlier this week from Wuhan and voluntaril­y confined to a California military air base for 72 hours of health screenings were placed under a mandatory 14-day quarantine on Friday.

By Saturday afternoon, none of those quarantine­d showed any symptoms of having the virus, said Jose Arballo, a spokesman for the public health department in Riverside County, where the air base is located. He said test results were still pending.

The order to keep the Americans on the base marked the CDC’s first mandatory quarantine for decades.

“Since this hasn’t been done in 51 years there’s quite the scramble to work through all the procedures,” a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) official said, adding that the last mandatory quarantine was ordered to fight smallpox.

The official, who requested anonymity because they are not authorized to speak publicly about the matter, said DHS personnel would take over running medical screenings at airports this weekend to free up their CDC counterpar­ts for other tasks.

State and local authoritie­s will likely play a role with mandatory quarantine­s, the official said, which could mean “a lot of variance across the country for how it gets implemente­d.”

A DHS spokeswoma­n denied the department was scrambling and said it has been working on these plans since last summer, when it began contractin­g medical profession­als and readying quarantine and health screening plans in case it had to ramp up for the Ebola outbreak.

“We were able to quickly tailor those plans and contracts to the coronaviru­s,” said the spokeswoma­n, Heather Swift.

Swift said state and local officials are always involved in public health and emergency response, but that there is a uniform standard. “All passengers who receive a positive symptoms screening will be placed in quarantine. Those who show no symptoms will be sent home on self-quarantine,” she said.

Nearly 12,000 people have been infected globally by the virus, according to the WHO, with all but just over 130 of those cases occurring in China.

U.S. health officials have said risks to the United States remain low.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A woman wears a mask in Chinatown following the outbreak of the novel coronaviru­s, in Chicago on Thursday.
REUTERS A woman wears a mask in Chinatown following the outbreak of the novel coronaviru­s, in Chicago on Thursday.

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