The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fulton preps for coronaviru­s, plans for worst

But interim county health director says flu a bigger concern.

- By Ben Brasch ben.brasch@ajc.com

Fulton County government leaders said Wednesday they are planning for the worst while doing their best to prevent a widespread coronaviru­s problem.

The day before, state health officials announced that a Fulton father and his 15-year-old son contracted the deadly virus while traveling in Italy, making them the first cases in the state.

“This is the first of many. I imagine we’re going to get more,” Dr. S. Elizabeth Ford, interim director of the Ful- ton health department, told commission­ers Wednesday.

She gave the board an overview of what the county is doing to slow the virus, such as adding extra hand sanitizer stations to polling places during early voting and wiping down the containers where visitors place their keys while going through security to enter the Pryor Street county government building.

The illness, k nown as COVID-19, gives recipients symptoms similar to the flu: fever, coughing and sometimes pneumonia and shortness of breath. The disease started in China, where the mortality rate is 2%. It has spread throughout the world, sickening tens of thousands of people.

Ford said she is more con- cerned about the seasonal flu, which last year came early. Even still, she and her staff are preparing for the coro- navirus by doing things such as fitting medical workers with specialize­d face masks and running drills. She said

there’s a chance they will put in place drive-through vaccinatio­ns at clinics if the virus spreads.

Ford said there are misconcept­ions that don’t help, and she wants to hire a pub- lic informatio­n officer specif- ically for situations like this. Ford said she was going to meet with human resources staff later Wednesday.

Commi s sioner Natalie Hall asked Ford how many vacancies her department had. County staff said there were 60 unfilled positions.

“We are having a health epidemic, and we need the outreach into the communitie­s, so we need to resolve

that issue as quickly as possible,” Hall said.

Alton Adams, Fulton’s deputy chief operating officer, told reporters after the meeting that he and other county staff are formulatin­g a plan in case the number of cases increase.

He said the county has identified 300-400 essential staff of the county’s 4,000 employees who would work from remote locations, like the county airport or libraries. Adams said he was meeting with officials from the sheriff ’s office and the courts on Thursday to talk about next steps.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM 2015 ?? Dr. S. Elizabeth Ford, Fulton health department interim director, on Wednesday told what the county is doing to slow coronaviru­s, such as wiping down containers where visitors put keys going through security at the county government building.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM 2015 Dr. S. Elizabeth Ford, Fulton health department interim director, on Wednesday told what the county is doing to slow coronaviru­s, such as wiping down containers where visitors put keys going through security at the county government building.

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