Lodi News-Sentinel

CDC: Coronaviru­s spread in U.S. is inevitable

- By Colleen Shalby and James F. Peltz

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has advised communitie­s to take precaution­s in the event that the coronaviru­s spreads — something officials believe to be inevitable.

“Ultimately, we expect we will see coronaviru­s spread in this country,” CDC Director Nancy Messonnier said. “It’s not so much a question of if, but a question of when.”

Messonnier advised parents to talk to schools about the possibilit­y of internetba­sed learning in the event that COVID-19 spreads and students would need to refrain from attending classes in a school building, and for businesses to think about how to use teleconfer­encing meetings in the event that employees would need to work from home. Messonnier said officials would also need to consider whether large community-based events would need to be canceled in such an event.

There is still no vaccine for the virus, which has killed more than 2,700 people — mostly in mainland China. Though the CDC’s mandatory quarantine prompted health officials to scramble and has stirred growing fears, it is one of the few tools officials believe can mitigate the spread of the disease.

Messonnier reminded people to take proactive steps in washing their hands and cleaning exposed surfaces. She also reiterated that despite fears over coronaviru­s, the flu still poses a greater risk to the public.

There are currently 53 cases of confirmed coronaviru­s in the United States — 40 of those are repatriate­d individual­s from the Diamond Princess cruise ship.

Stock prices plummeted for the second consecutiv­e day as investors grew increasing­ly skeptical that the virus would soon be contained, thus raising prospects that the outbreak could do further damage to the global economy.

The Dow Jones industrial average, which had skidded 1,032 points Monday, dropped an additional 879.44 points Tuesday to 27,081.36 for a decline of 3.2%. The blue-chip average now has dived 8.4% since setting a record high Feb. 12.

The S&P 500 fell 3% on Tuesday and the Nasdaq composite index lost 2.8% in the worst selling on Wall Street since the fall of 2018. Stocks of companies involved in travel, energy and consumer goods continued to take the worst hit amid fears of a slowdown in consumer spending and demand for crude oil and gasoline.

The price of crude on U.S. markets dropped 3% to just under $50 a barrel. American Airlines Group fell 9.2%, Marriott Internatio­nal lost 8%, American Express Co. fell 5.7% and Exxon Mobil Corp. dropped 3.8%. As they fled stocks, many investors continued buying U.S. government bonds, further sending the bonds’ yields lower.

The yield on the benchmark 10year Treasury note fell to a record low 1.34%. There’s also speculatio­n that the Federal Reserve might have to cut interest rates in response to any virus-sparked slowdown in economic growth. Richard

Clarida, vice chair of the central bank, said in a speech Tuesday that while the U.S. economy currently “is in a good place” and that “U.S. inflation remains muted,” the Fed is “closely monitoring the emergence of the coronaviru­s.”

He said it was “still too soon to even speculate about either the size or the persistenc­e” of a virus-related economic disruption, but “if developmen­ts emerge that, in the future, trigger a material reassessme­nt of our outlook, we will respond accordingl­y.”

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