The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Houlahan urges common sense amid outbreak

- By Karen Shuey kshuey@readingeag­le.com @KarenShuey­RE on Twitter

Be prepared. Do not panic. Use common sense.

Those were the key messages during a telephone town hall about the coronaviru­s hosted by U.S. Rep. Chrissy Houlahan Tuesday morning.

The Chester County Democrat, who represents the 6th District that includes Reading and many southweste­rn communitie­s in Berks County, said the purpose of the call was to inform her constituen­ts about what is being done at the federal level to combat the outbreak and highlight efforts necessary to prevent its spread.

What Congress has been doing

Houlahan told those on the call that she joined her colleagues in Congress to approve $8.3 billion in emergency aid last week.

The bipartisan package, which includes nearly $7.8 billion for agencies dealing with the virus, is substantia­lly larger than what the White House proposed last month. It also authorizes roughly $500 million to allow Medicare providers to administer telehealth services so that more elderly patients, who are at greater risk, can receive care at home.

She said she also signed onto a letter along with 60 of her Democratic colleagues in the House urging President Donald Trump to make swift changes to increase the effectiven­ess of the administra­tion’s response to the coronaviru­s outbreak.

The letter identified flaws in the early phases of efforts to contain the disease including disorganiz­ation, a poorly defined chain of command, the spread of bad informatio­n, inadequate funding and staffing vacancies. They offered to work with the administra­tion to make improvemen­ts, but stressed that lives depend on the president and his team showing stronger leadership.

What the experts are saying

Houlahan then shifted gears to how people can do their part to help prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s.

“I know there’s been a great deal of conflictin­g informatio­n going around,” she told those on the call. “I wanted to convene this call with local health experts so members of our own community can have access to the best possible informatio­n about smart steps you can take to prepare.”

Three experts — Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia, Jeanne Casner, director of Chester County Department of Health, and Marie Keim, director infection control and prevention at Reading Hospital — were featured guests on the call and fielded questions from participan­ts.

Offit gave an overview of the coronaviru­s. He said it appears the virus, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention believes is spread mainly from person-to-person through respirator­y droplets produced when an infected person coughs or sneezes, is spreading easily and widely in the community in some affected geographic areas.

“Over the next few months we will see how this plays out and which ways this is being transmitte­d,” he said.

Casner said not having all the informatio­n at this point to know all the ways its being spread is what makes responding to a virus like this so complex. But, she stressed, counties throughout the state have plans in place that are designed to help prevent and mitigate the transmissi­on of an outbreak as well as communicat­e accurate informatio­n to reduce the fear within the community.

“This is a very rapidly evolving situation and we do anticipate the identifica­tion of more cases,” she said. “And I know this sounds almost too basic considerin­g how widespread this is globally,

but we are really stressing the fundamenta­ls: stay at home if you’re sick; practice good personal hygiene like regular hand-washing; reconsider community gatherings in particular if you’re elderly or have underlying health conditions; and postpone all unnecessar­y travel.”

Casner added that officials from neighborin­g counties are working together and with the state to coordinate the response because the virus has no borders.

Keim said hospitals are making sure personnel are protected and have the equipment to respond to the outbreak. As the needs of the community change, she said health care providers are monitoring the situation closely and collaborat­ing with community partners to ensure everyone is working with the same informatio­n.

“It’s important to make sure that we are staying on top of the informatio­n because it’s constantly evolving,” she said. “We’re going to make sure our protocols are in line with the latest informatio­n that we’re getting from the CDC.”

What people want to know

Are tests available in Berks and Chester counties? And is testing happening?

Casner said tests are available in those communitie­s.

She added that several people have been tested for the virus in Chester County, but they have not yet received the results of those tests. If the tests come back positive from the Pennsylvan­ia laboratory, she said, those individual­s will be considered presumptiv­e positive cases. Those tests then will be sent to the federal laboratory in Atlanta to be confirmed positive cases.

Should I take the same precaution­s that I do to avoid the flu?

Offit said that is exactly the right course of action, especially someone who is older or has a compromise­d immune system.

Can I catch the virus from collecting my mail and daily newspaper?

Offit said he believes the danger is extremely low. But he suggested people get into the habit of washing their hands whenever handling items or using devices that many people might come

into contact with as a precaution.

Why are we so much more concerned about the coronaviru­s than the flu?

Offit said that honestly he’s not really sure, adding that he believes the coronaviru­s isn’t going to be as deadly as the flu.

“I think we are disproport­ionately fearful of this virus because it was believed that if you catch this virus you’re far more likely to die of it,” he said. “And I don’t think that’s necessaril­y true. I think we scare people in some ways a little unnecessar­ily.”

Should people be quarantine­d if they’re fearful they have the coronaviru­s?

Offit said he’s not sure it will have an impact.

“If this virus is truly spread by person-to-person contact as some believe then quarantine won’t make much of a difference,” he said. “I think we’re doing these sorts of draconian measures to close schools and cancel meetings all with the hope that this is going to stem the tide. But we’re doing these things in an abundance of caution.”

 ??  ?? U.S. Rep. Chrissy Houlahan
U.S. Rep. Chrissy Houlahan

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