Dayton Daily News

Kettering hospital confirms 1st case

2 others at Troy care center test positive; 17 at facility being tested.

- By Lynn Hulsey, Kaitlin Schroeder and Thomas Gnau Staff Writers

Kettering Me d ical Center treated its first patient who tested positive for the coronaviru­s, the hospital confirmed Wednesday night.

The hospital announced that the patient came in on Saturday and was discharged in good condition on Sunday. A test for COVID-19 came back positive on Wednesday, said Elizabeth Long, communicat­ions manager.

The patient was a man in his early 60s. Hospital staff met him outside the emergency department and escorted him directly to a negative pressure room to avoid exposure to anyone in the emergency department, according to a release from Kettering Health Network.

After the man spent one night in the negative pressure room, he was discharged and ordered to self-isolate.

2 cases at Miami County assisted living center

Two patients who were at the same Miami County assisted living facility also are considered positive for COVID-19, and a total of 17 other residents, staff and visitors who came into contact with them have been tested, health officials from Miami and Clark counties said Wednesday night.

One of the two is a man in his 70s who has been admitted to the Dayton Veterans Affairs Medical Center. The other is a woman in her 60s.

Health officials are working to determine who came into contact with those two patients at the Koester Pavilion Assisted Living Facility in Troy. That includes 10

other residents of the facility, six staff members and one visitor.

Clark County Health Commission­er Charles Patterson said the veteran is from Bethel Twp. in Clark County.

“Understand that this is a trying time and its definitely an unpreceden­ted time in our history,” Patterson said of the COVID-19 crisis.

The test results for the other people connected to the assisted living facility were expected within 24 hours.

“Koester Pavilion did absolutely everything they were supposed to do following those orders ... it’s just a community spread incident. We can’t give you any details when and where it started because we don’t have enough informatio­n yet,” Miami County Health Commission­er Dennis Propes said.

Patterson added the counties “have already been in contact with individual­s, we’ve placed them under quarantine to make sure that these case contacts aren’t in turn able to spread it to additional folks out there.”

The veteran was transferre­d to the Dayton VA Medical Center and, “placed into contact isolation for an unrelated medical condition shortly before he began exhibiting any symptoms related to COVID-19,” the VA said in a statement.

“Because proper procedures were followed, the risk of transmissi­on to other patients and staff remains low,” the medical center said. “The veteran is being cared for in respirator­y isolation by staff who are specially trained on the Centers for Disease Control treatment guidelines, including the use of personal protective equipment and infection control techniques.”

VA staff who might have been in close contact to the patient are being reviewed by infection control experts and will be contacted to review risk and next steps, the VA added.

While the coronaviru­s news has continued to rapidly change, Montgomery County Health Commission­er Jeff Cooper said on Wednesday that one thing remains constant: It is crucial for the community that those with symptoms need to stay home to stop exponentia­l spread.

“Stay home. That also includes household members who may not be sick but have been exposed to you,” Cooper said.

A delay at the CDC kept test kits from being widely available until earlier this month. So health officials say it is natural that the number of positive cases has jumped because many jurisdicti­ons are just now able to test large numbers of people.

“We are going to see a marked increase in the number of cases because we are doing more testing and we are getting test results back,” said Dr. Glen Solomon, chairman of the department of internal medicine at Wright State University. “I think we should all be concerned but not panicked.”

About 80 percent of people who are infected only have mild symptoms, said Dan Suffoletto, public informatio­n supervisor at Public Health-Dayton & Montgomery County.

Most people in the Dayton region already might have been exposed and cleared the virus without serious effects, said Dr. Joseph Allen, regional medical director for Premier Health.

In Ohio there are 88 confirmed cases in 19 counties, and 26 people have been hospitaliz­ed, according to the Ohio Department of Health website.

Nationwide there are 7,038 total confirmed or presumptiv­e positive cases of COVID19 reported to or tested by the CDC since Jan. 21, according to the agency’s website. There have been 97 deaths.

Drive-up testing for the coronaviru­s began in Dayton on Tuesday for people who have a doctor’s note saying a test is needed. The site, a collaborat­ion between Premier Health and the University of Dayton, is at the UD Arena parking lot, 1801

Edwin C. Moses Blvd., and is open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. Health profession­als will collect a specimen using a nasal swab that will be sent to a Quest Diagnostic­s lab for testing. Most patients were initially tested for flu and if they tested negative went on to more extensive testing that included the COVID-19 test.

As of 4 p.m. Wednesday a total of 503 people were tested, including 470 who were tested for COVID-19 and 33 people who tested positive for influenza on Tuesday and Wednesday. The COVID-19 results take 24 to 48 hours, said Sharon Howard, director of site communicat­ions for Premier Health.

People will only be tested if they have a doctor’s order, which is based on symptoms, direct contact with an infected person and travel to a country that has an outbreak. Howard said 75 people were turned away from the drive-through site because they did not have a doctor’s order.

Patients with COVID-19 symptoms — cough, fever and shortness of breath — who need a doctor’s order can call Primary Health Solutions at (937) 535-5060, local public health officials said. The new-to-Dayton practice has extra capacity and is screening patients remotely to see what treatment they need. Primary Health Solutions is a federally qualified health center, which gets funding for catering to those with Medicaid and the uninsured.

Allen said people who are coming to be tested are definitely concerned.

“There is a healthy dose of fear and that is bred by the unknown,” Allen said. “I spoke with a young lady who had just come back from Seattle and she was afraid.”

He said the woman had symptoms and was tested, although the results are not yet known.

Allen said officials are talking about further limiting who can get tested due to declinings­upplies in the test kits. Currently Premier has enough to do five to seven more days of specimen collection­s at the drive-up site.

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