Call & Times

Navy reservist from Italy is first case of virus in Maine

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AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) — A Navy reservist who’d returned from Italy is the first person in Maine to test positive for the coronaviru­s after voluntaril­y isolating herself and reporting to a hospital emergency room for testing, officials said Thursday.

The woman in her 50s is self-quarantine­d at her home in Androscogg­in County. State epidemiolo­gists are speaking to her and her medical provider to assess travel history, and it has started to investigat­e possible community exposure, Gov. Janet Mills said.

“With one presumptiv­e positive case, Maine has a unique window of opportunit­y to delay an outbreak, like those we see in other states, and to minimize our exposure,” Mills said.

Maine is the last state in New England to record a positive test for the new virus. It was only a matter of time, officials said, as the virus spread through the region, and around the world.

The woman suffered respirator­y symptoms after visiting a “country of concern” and provided a sample at Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston, said Kate Carlisle, spokeswoma­n for the hospital’s parent company. The sample was tested by the state lab in Augusta and will be sent to a federal lab for confirmati­on.

The patient became the first Navy reservist to test positive for the virus, the Navy Reserve said in a statement. Before returning to Maine, she’d been stationed in Italy, a friend told the Sun Journal newspaper.

In response to the spread of the virus, the governor announced a series of steps aimed at slowing, or stopping, the spread of illness a day after the World Health Organizati­on declared a pandemic.

Mills announced she was suspending nonessenti­al, out-of-state travel for 30 days for state workers. She also recommende­d the postponeme­nt of nonessenti­al indoor gatherings of 250 people or more, and took steps to ensure patient reimbursem­ent for tests and treatment through a declaratio­n of an insurance emergency.

The director of the Maine Center for Disease Control, Nirav Shah, urged people to “prepare but not panic.” He said that means taking care of themselves and protecting themselves, and staying informed about developmen­ts. “This is a situation where fear and misinforma­tion can spread more quickly than the coronaviru­s itself,” he said.

For most people, the new coronaviru­s, which causes the disease COVID-19, results in only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia, or death.

The vast majority of people recover. People with mild illness recover in about two weeks, while those with more severe illness may take three to six weeks to recover, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

The virus outbreak has roiled the stock market and affected travel around the world, with many events being canceled. The governor’s announceme­nt came after the University of Maine System and Bowdoin College announced that students would be receiving instructio­n remotely for the remainder of the semester.

Cancellati­ons continued Thursday: Hockey East canceled its tournament, in which UMaine was hosting Connecticu­t in a weekend quarterfin­al series in Orono; the city of Portland canceled its annual St. Patrick’s Day Parade, set for Sunday; and the state bicentenni­al committee canceled a party celebratin­g Maine’s statehood on Sunday.

At the Maine Statehouse, public tours and public events were suspended, and the viewing galleries were closed for the rest of the legislativ­e session. But Senate President Troy Jackson and House Speaker Sara Gideon decided to let the legislativ­e session continue.

The buzzwords of the governor’s news conference were “social distancing.” The idea was to limit gatherings in which the virus could be easily spread.

“Reducing the interactio­n of large groups of people across the state, I think, will delay an outbreak and may substantia­lly reduce the spread. Delaying or mitigating an outbreak will reduce the strain on our healthcare system so that it can respond effectivel­y to people diagnosed with the virus, and still take care of their regular patients,” the governor told reporters.

The news of the state’s first coronaviru­s case came a day after the announceme­nt that the state was getting $4.6 million from the federal government to help fight the virus.

The funding was made available through the $7.8 billion coronaviru­s appropriat­ions package that passed Congress last week. It will allow Maine to carry out surveillan­ce, epidemiolo­gy, laboratory work, infection control, mitigation, communicat­ions, and other preparedne­ss and response activities, officials said.

The Associated Press receives support for health and science coverage from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education.

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