Dayton Daily News

Italy’s virus cases more than quadruple as cluster emerges

- By Luca Bruno and Nicole Winfield

— The number of people in Italy infected with the new virus from China more than quadrupled Friday due to an emerging cluster of cases in the country’s north that prompted officials to order schools, restaurant­s and businesses to close.

Many of the 14 new cases represente­d the first infections in Italy acquired through secondary contagion and brought the country’s total to 17. The cluster was located in a handful of tiny towns southeast of Milan in the Lombardy region, said Lombardy regional health chief Giulio Gallera.

“This was foreseeabl­e even if we hoped it wouldn’t have happened,” Gallera said.

The first to fall ill was a 38-year-old Italian who met with someone who had returned from China on Jan. 21 without presenting any symptoms of the new virus, health authoritie­s said. That person was being kept in isolation and appears to present antibodies to the virus.

The 38-year-old is now hospitaliz­ed in critical condition. His wife and a friend of his, who was a member of his running club, also tested positive for the virus. Three patients at the hospital in Codogno where he went with flu-like symptoms on Feb. 18 also have infections, as do five nurses and doctors.

In addition, another three elderly people, who frequented the same cafe as the runner’s father, also tested positive Friday, Gallera said.

Tests were under way, meanwhile, on the 38-yearold’s doctor, who made a house call on him, as well as on 120 people he worked with in the research and developmen­t branch of Unilever in Casalpuste­rlengo, Gallera said.

Word of the contagion sparked fears throughout the region, particular­ly given the closure of the emergency room at the Codogno hospital.

“We are old and we are very concerned,” said 76-year-old Codogno resident Carmelo Falcone. “I live on my own. I really don’t know what to do.”

Italian Health Minister Roberto Speranza said Italy is now seeing the same sort of “cluster” of cases that Germany and France have seen. He signed an ordinance with Lombardy’s regional president outlining measures to contain the cluster to the 10 towns so far affected: Codogno, Castiglion­e d’Adda, Casalpuste­rlengo, Maleo, Fombio, Bertonico, Castelgeru­ndo, Terranova dei Passerini, Somaglia and San Fiorano.

The towns, which have between 1,000-15,000 residents each, are located around 37 miles southeast of Milan, Lombardy’s capital and Italy’s business center.

The ordinance suspends public gatherings, commercial and business activity, sport, education, and other recreation­al activities throughout the region, Speranza, the health minister, said.

He defended the precaution­ary measures Italy took previously, noting that Italy remains the lone European country to have barred flights to and from China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan.

“We had the highest measures in Europe,” he said.

The health ministry ordered anyone who came into direct contact with the victims to be quarantine­d for 14 days. And it recommende­d others in the region stay home. Italy’s civil protection agency, meanwhile, was working to identify military buildings, hotels or other structures that could serve as isolation wards if necessary.

“In other parts of the world, and also in China, it has been demonstrat­ed that this system (of self-isolation) helps in a substantia­l way to block the spread,” Lombardy regional president Attilio Fontana said. “But we must not let ourselves be overcome by panic.”

Despite the calls for safeguards, Italians were having a hard time finding protective face masks. A sampling of Milan pharmacies reported selling out weeks ago, as did a pharmacist in Codogno who said Italy had been sending masks to China for weeks.

 ?? LUCA BRUNO / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A nurse wearing a sanitary mask watches from a window of the hospital of Codogno, near Lodi in Northern Italy, on Friday.
LUCA BRUNO / ASSOCIATED PRESS A nurse wearing a sanitary mask watches from a window of the hospital of Codogno, near Lodi in Northern Italy, on Friday.

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