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From a scare in Shanghai to a quarantine in Georgia

- By Jillian Tracy, Madeline Laguaite, Brittany Carter and Andi Clements Georgia Health News

Before traveling to China in late January, Holly Bik and her husband watched countless news reports and read as much as they could about the novel coronaviru­s, which had been detected in the country a few weeks earlier.

Bik’s husband is from China. The couple, who live in Athens, had their first baby last June, and wanted the infant to meet his greatgrand­father, who was recovering from surgery in a district called Qingpu, a suburb of Shanghai.

Qingpu is about 500 miles east of Wuhan, the epicenter of the coronaviru­s outbreak. And as the family contemplat­ed their trip, it still appeared that the virus was mostly confined to the Wuhan area.

After weighing the odds, the couple went ahead with their travel plans. Things would be fine, they figured. They weren’t going to the heart of the outbreak. “We worked with the best informatio­n that we could have at the time,” said Bik, an assistant professor of marine sciences at UGA.

But the coronaviru­s situation degraded rapidly even as they were flying from Atlanta to China.

“It wasn’t until we actually had gotten to China that everything blew up in the media, and ... the scale of the problem really became apparent,” recalled Bik. As the disease spread and caused more deaths in China, the government there began taking more active measures.

Bik, her husband and their 8-month-old son soon had to scramble to find a way back to Georgia, where they then spent 14 days quarantine­d inside their Athens residence.

Waiting for what happens next

The Georgia Department of Public Health says that, at any one time, about 200 people are quarantini­ng themselves in the state due to recent travel that may have exposed them to the novel coronaviru­s, which is now officially known as COVID-19.

On Monday, Gov. Brian Kemp said two people in Fulton County had tested positive for the virus. One, identified as a 56-year-old man, recently traveled to Milan, Italy, where there is a significan­t outbreak. The other is his 15-yearold son.

An outbreak of respirator­y disease first detected in China in late December was traced to a new kind of coronaviru­s. Since then, people have tested positive for the disease in more than 70 other countries. Symptoms are similar to the flu, and people may experience fever, cough and shortness of breath. The severity of the disease can vary widely.

There have been more than 120 confirmed cases in more than a dozen U.S. states, including Georgia, Arizona, California, Illinois, Massachuse­tts, Washington and Wisconsin. Most of the people who have tested positive for coronaviru­s in this country were connected to overseas travel. Eleven deaths have been reported in the United States as of Wednesday, and globally the disease has been deadly in about 3 percent of those infected.

As more people test positive in a growing number of countries, public health experts are bracing for a broader impact in the United States.

“It’s not so much a question of if this will happen anymore, but rather more a question of exactly when this will happen and how many people in the country will have a severe illness,” said Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of the National Center for Immunizati­on and Respirator­y Diseases at the CDC.

The focus to date has been on containing the spread of the disease by limiting travel to affected regions, identifyin­g and isolating people showing symptoms, and asking travelers who may have been exposed to COVID-19 to voluntaril­y isolate themselves, as Bik’s family did.

Americans should start developing plans for what to do if authoritie­s take more drastic steps against the disease, like the closing of schools and canceling of public gatherings, Messonnier said in a briefing in late February.

“I understand this whole situation may seem overwhelmi­ng and that disruption to everyday life may be severe,” she said last week. “But these are things that people need to start thinking about now.”

Bik and her family have had a preview of what could happen here — although there’s no certainty that it will.

The family has a lot of experience traveling to China. Over the course of their earlier visits, Bik and her husband establishe­d a bit of a routine. They stayed at the same hotel each time and frequented their favorite restaurant­s.

At the time of their flight on Jan. 25, the U.S. State Department had issued its lowest travel advisory — a Level 1 — which warns travelers to “exercise normal precaution­s.”

Bik and her husband were aware that there was a certain risk, but didn’t see it as that serious. To prepare for their flight, the couple purchased respirator face masks and Motrin for their baby, which they tweeted about on Jan. 24.

It wasn’t until we actually had gotten to China that everything blew up in the media, and ... the scale of the problem really became apparent.”

But when they arrived in Shanghai, the bustling metropolis they were familiar with had visibly changed. “Everyone was just staying indoors,” Bik said.

Government officials had suspended long-distance bus service in and out of the city. Businesses that didn’t provide utilities, food, and medical supplies or services had been closed.

“It felt like you’re walking around early on a Sunday morning when everyone’s in bed and nothing’s really happening. It’s kind of just very quiet,” Bik recalled.

The retirement home where their elderly relative was staying had stopped visitation­s in order to protect residents, but they got special permission to visit him twice, for about an hour and a half each time, Bik said.

From there, things started happening quickly.

On Jan. 30, the World Health Organizati­on issued a statement declaring the coronaviru­s outbreak a “public health emergency of internatio­nal concern.”

On Jan. 31, Delta Air Lines, the main air carrier out of Atlanta’s Hartsfield-jackson Airport, announced that it would be suspending flights to and from China until April. Other major airlines, like United, American Airlines days, avoid crowded places and stay about 6 feet away from other people.

This is the recommende­d procedure because the incubation period of the virus — the time between a person catching it and showing symptoms — can be up to 14 days. A person who is infected can have few or no symptoms but still potentiall­y infect others during that time, health officials warn.

For people who have been to China or have been “exposed to someone sick with COVID-19 in the last 14 days,” the CDC recommends limitation­s on normal activities. In other words, a selfquaran­tine.

Bik and family didn’t mind quarantini­ng themselves, at least not at first. They had been through an ordeal in China, and when they got back to Georgia they were exhausted and experienci­ng jet lag. “We could take naps and just slowly get our bodies readjusted to the time zone,” she said.

There was even an intellectu­al dimension to the situation. “The scientist in me is enjoying being part of an epidemiolo­gical study,” Bik tweeted on Feb 7.

Bik stayed on top of her job by working from home, using email and British Airways announced and video calls to stand in for similar plans. face-to-face meetings. Her husband

The hotel in Shanghai where the did the same. family was staying began to sim- So the quarantine period was plify the menu — rationing food bearable, but Bik suggests that it because the hotel manager was got old fairly fast. unsure how long supplies would When asked to describe the realities last during the lockdown. All individual­s of being grounded for two who left the building had weeks, she said it wasn’t easy being to have their temperatur­e checked stuck at home. She wanted to get by the doorman before they were out and do ordinary things again. allowed back in. “It was more frustratin­g than

By Feb. 2, the U.S. State Department anything, knowing that you can’t had elevated its travel warning leave. Like I can’t go to a coffee for China from the lowest level shop or I can’t go to yoga,” she said. to the highest: “Do not travel.” Still, she’s glad she and her family

“It just didn’t seem like there heeded the recommenda­tion of was any end in sight to when they health authoritie­s and self-quarantine­d. were going to go back to normal,” It was the sensible thing to do. Bik said. Her family found themselves After 14 days, they still had no “scrambling to get home.” symptoms.

From high anxiety to cabin fever The Biks are back at work. But Fortunatel­y for Bik, her family the situation continues to evolve. had reschedule­d their return flight UGA on Monday announced before Delta announced flight cancellati­ons. plans to suspend travel programs But getting home now that take students to Italy, South meant first flying to Japan, and Korea and China for the Spring undergoing more rounds of temperatur­e 2020 term. Students returning checks and evaluation­s. from those three countries — all

When they went through customs of which have experience­d COVID-19 after finally landing in Atlanta, outbreaks — are asked to they were pulled aside and self-quarantine for 14 days. questioned about where in China they had traveled. No one in the family had a fever or other symptoms, but it was recommende­d that they self-quarantine for 14

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