New York Daily News

Virus a long-term threat

15 U.S. cases so far, but CDC sees it spreading into ’21

- BY NELSON OLIVEIRA

As China struggles to contain the highly contagious coronaviru­s that’s killed nearly 1,400 people in that country, American health officials are preparing for a potential outbreak within the U.S. and warning that the illness may still be around well after flu season ends.

“This new virus represents an unpreceden­ted public health threat,” Dr. Nancy Messonnier, of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a news briefing Friday afternoon.

The pneumonia-like illness, which this week was officially named COVID-19 — has sickened more than 60,000 people in central China’s Hubei province, where the virus was first discovered in late December, and continues to spread to other countries through human contact.

In the U.S., only 15 people have been diagnosed with the disease, with most of them having traveled to China. The only two U.S. patients who hadn’t recently been to China contracted the virus from their spouses.

CDC officials warn that the number of person-toperson transmissi­ons within the U.S. is likely to grow.

“We don’t know a lot about this virus,” the agency’s director, Dr. Robert Redfield, told CNN. “This virus is probably with us beyond this season, beyond this year, and I think eventually the virus will find a foothold and we will get community-based transmissi­on.”

There’s no evidence the COVID-19 is embedded in any part of this country, but Redfield believes it will “become a community virus at some point in time, this year or next year.”

Federal authoritie­s have implemente­d a series of drastic measures to prevent or delay such an outbreak. Foreign nationals have been banned from entering the U.S. if they’ve been to China in the previous 14 days. U.S. residents who have been to that country within the same period are required to stay under quarantine for two weeks.

 ?? /JOHN AMIS/AP ?? Jay Butler, at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, says coronaviru­s will be a problem in U.S. until at least next year.
/JOHN AMIS/AP Jay Butler, at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, says coronaviru­s will be a problem in U.S. until at least next year.

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