The Day

U.S. ramps up coronaviru­s measures

Travel restrictio­ns, quarantine­s announced under a ‘public health emergency’

- By LENA H. SUN, LENNY BERNSTEIN, ERICA WERNER and YASMEEN ABUTALEB

Washington — The Trump administra­tion on Friday announced dramatic travel restrictio­ns and quarantine­s that officials said were meant to limit the spread of the coronaviru­s, a severe escalation of the federal government’s response after initially downplayin­g potential risks.

The White House declared a “national public health emergency” and — beginning on Sunday at 5 p.m. — will bar any non-U.S. citizen who recently visited China from entering the United States.

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar also said the Trump administra­tion was establishi­ng mandatory quarantine­s for any Americans who visited the Hubei province of China within the past 14 days and require screening and self-quarantine­s for all other Americans who recently visited any other parts of China. Shortly after a White House press conference in which officials said there were six confirmed U.S. cases, a seventh case was confirmed in Santa Clara County, Calif.

The coronaviru­s emerged in China in early December. China reported today 259 people have died of a new virus, which has now infected nearly 11,800 in at least 24 countries.

There have been more than 100 cases reported outside of China. At least 12 people who have contracted the virus have not recently traveled to China and were infected from other people.

The number of those infected has surpassed the SARS 2003 outbreak, but the new coronaviru­s appears to be less deadly. Studies have estimated that each infected person spreads the virus to two to three other people.

The new travel and quarantine measures, which appeared to be unpreceden­ted on such a scale, were part of a rapidly evolving and occasional­ly disjointed internatio­nal response to the growing health scare, in part because officials are learning that the coronaviru­s is much more difficult to detect than initially thought and can transmit from people who don’t show any symptoms. New cases were reported Friday in the United Kingdom and Russia, and Canada confirmed its fourth case later in the day.

“This is a serious health situation in China, but I want to emphasize that the risk to the American public currently is low,” said Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Our goal is to do all we can do to keep it that way.”

“Right now, there’s a lot of unknowns,” he added later.

White House officials said the new restrictio­ns would be temporary but did not say when they might be lifted. Meanwhile, major U.S. airlines that travel to China — American Airlines, United Airlines and Delta Air Lines — announced they were suspending their flights to the country, in some cases until late March. The duration of these cancellati­ons showed how government­s and businesses are now preparing for much longer-term interrupti­ons than initially thought, raising the possibilit­y that there could be a sizable impact on the global economy.

Many Chinese businesses remain closed, and China is a top trading partner of a number of countries throughout the world.

These announceme­nts helped send the U.S. stock market sharply lower, with the Dow Jones industrial average falling Friday by a dramatic 600 points, or more than 2 percent.

At a hastily arranged afternoon press briefing, White House officials stressed that they believed there was little risk to the U.S. public from the coronaviru­s and that the measures were an attempt to keep it that way. But their comments also revealed how rapidly the process is evolving.

Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said that the process for testing people for the coronaviru­s had proven very imprecise so far and that this is one of the reasons for the aggressive U.S. response. He said that so far the government was unable to know with 100 percent certainty whether someone tested for the coronaviru­s actually has it.

 ?? GEMUNU AMARASINGH­E/AP PHOTO ?? An airline staffer assists tourists from Wuhan, China, as they wait for a charter flight back to Wuhan at the airport in Bangkok, Thailand. A group of Chinese tourists who have been trapped in Thailand since Wuhan was locked down due to an outbreak of a new virus returned to China on Friday.
GEMUNU AMARASINGH­E/AP PHOTO An airline staffer assists tourists from Wuhan, China, as they wait for a charter flight back to Wuhan at the airport in Bangkok, Thailand. A group of Chinese tourists who have been trapped in Thailand since Wuhan was locked down due to an outbreak of a new virus returned to China on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States