Dayton Daily News

Officials have asked 175 Ohio travelers to self-quarantine

- By Laura Hancock

— Public health officials have asked roughly 175 people who have arrived in O hio f rom China to self-quarantine for 14 days to prevent the potential spread of the new coronaviru­s, Ohio Department of Health Director Dr. Amy Acton said.

No one in Ohio has tested positive for the new virus, but the department has cho- sen to ask for self-quarantin- ing since COVID-19 is highly infectious, Acton said in a Monday telephone interview from Washington, where she was attending a conference to learn more about the virus.

“In Ohio, we’ve taken a very conservati­ve approach,” she said. “The CDC has had varying levels of guidance, because it’s an evolving situation.”

New infections and deaths in China are falling, but they are rapidly increasing in South Korea, Italy and Iran.

Acton described other measures her department and the state’s 113 local health agencies are taking, including:

■ Preparing for the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to send kits so the state can test samples from people who are suspected to be infected at its Columbus lab, which should be faster than federal testing. For now, the CDC has opened a second lab and is working out an issue with the test kits it intends to send to the states, she said. “That would be the hope: We would like to turn those around more quickly,” said Acton, a licensed preventive medicine physician.

■ Stocking up on hospital worker protection equipment to keep people safe if they have to attend to patients infected with

COVID-19. “It’s very infectious,” Acton said, explaining that it spreads by droplets from coughing, sneezing or anything that aerosolize­s the virus. “That’s why you see it spreading so quickly.”

■ Acton is expecting federal public health guidance — which for now are travel advisories — to soon change because the virus may become a pandemic. For now, Acton said that people can continue with public gatherings, but should stay at home if they’re feeling ill.

Self-quarantine

The state health department was able to identify people who had arrived from China because the CDC has screeners at 11 airports with flights arriving from China.

The screening hasn’t worked in all cases. For instance, there have been people reported more than once and some people haven’t been reported at all, but they called their local health department­s to let them know they arrived from China.

“So it has not been a perfect net,” she said. “They’ve said that all along. It’s not going to be a perfect quarantine.”

People in Ohio have cooperated with the self-quarantine, Acton said, which has meant making sure the travelers have their own bedroom and bathroom that’s separate from other people in the house.

Is it a pandemic?

Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, the director general of the World Health Organizati­on, during a Monday morning press briefing, said that coronaviru­s is not a pandemic, which the organizati­on defines as a worldwide spread of a disease, according to WHO.

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