Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

U.S. has 1st confirmed case of potentiall­y fatal coronaviru­s

- By Lena H. Sun and Lenny Bernstein

A Washington state man has been diagnosed with the mysterious virus that broke out last month in China, becoming the first confirmed case in the United States of an illness that has killed at least six people and sickened hundreds more, according to U.S. officials.

The man, in his 30s, is in stable condition at Providence Regional Medical Center in Everett, Wash. Officials said they are monitoring him there out of an abundance of caution, not because he is seriously ill.

The man returned to the United States last week, before federal health officials began screening travelers from the central Chinese city of Wuhan at Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York’s John F. Kennedy internatio­nal airports, the first such effort since the 2014 Ebola outbreak.

Washington state health officials said the man, a resident of Snohomish County, returned Wednesday from a trip to the region around Wuhan, where the outbreak began. Shortly after arriving at Seattle’s internatio­nal airport, he began feeling ill and reached out to his health care provider on Sunday. Local, state and federal officials quickly collected samples and sent them to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for testing.

His case was confirmed Monday as the coronaviru­s that has sickened close to 300 people in China and others in Thailand, Japan, Taiwan and South Korea.

CDC officials said Tuesday that they are expanding screening to internatio­nal airports in Atlanta and Chicago. More than 1,200 travelers have already been screened since Friday, with no one yet referred to a hospital or discovered to be ill with the virus.

Federal officials will also direct travelers arriving in the United States on direct and indirect flights from Wuhan to those five airports for screening. That process is getting worked out in the coming days. For example, if a passenger was originally scheduled to fly from Wuhan to Shanghai and then Boston, that flight would most likely be re-routed to JFK for screening, and then Boston, CDC officials said. Screenings are being conducted in Chinese and Mandarin.

The Washington state man’s case originated several days before airport screening began, but local, state and federal officials said they were on alert and quickly collaborat­ed to test him and put precaution­s in place.

A small number of health care workers and patients who may have been exposed to him have been told to watch for symptoms and are being monitored, Washington state health officials said. Officials are tracing the people he may have come into contact with in both China and the United States.

Officials praised the man for taking the initiative to reach out to his health care provider.

“He was a very astute gentleman,” said Scott Lindquist, Washington state’s epidemiolo­gist.

“He was looking at the internet actively” and saw informatio­n about the virus and its spread, Dr. Lindquist said in a news briefing on Tuesday.

Nancy Messonnier, director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunizati­on and Respirator­y Disease, said the risk posed by the virus to the general American population is low but that older adults with underlying health conditions may be at increased risk. She said federal officials are prepared to respond quickly.

“This is an evolving situation and, again, we do expect additional cases in the United States and globally,” she said.

CDC and officials from homeland security and transporta­tion agencies are working out how future travelers arriving in the United States from Wuhan will be redirected to the five airports.

U.S. officials want to make sure every time someone books a flight from Wuhan to the United States, their first point of entry is one of those airports, said Martin Cetron, director of CDC’s division of global migration and quarantine.

Only JFK and San Francisco airports have direct flights.

The process is complex and will involve “re-issuing tickets and redirectin­g passengers all over the globe,” Dr. Cetron said.

In addition to the expanding airport screening, the CDC has raised its travel alert notice from a level 1 to a level 2, urging travelers to Wuhan to avoid contact with sick people, animals (alive or dead) and animal markets.

The outbreak has grown rapidly in recent days, with authoritie­s in China reporting confirmed cases in multiple cities as hundreds of millions of people in China and elsewhere in Asia are on the move in the run-up to the Lunar New Year, the biggest travel event in the world.

The infection is believed to have begun among people who shopped or worked at an animal market in Wuhan. But its rapid spread led officials to conclude that people, as well as animals, could transmit the infection.

The Washington state man did not visit that market and did not know anyone who was ill, Washington state officials said.

The source of the man’s infection raises more questions and concerns about human-to-human transmissi­on of the disease. Chinese officials have confirmed that phenomenon is taking place.

To control this outbreak, health officials are trying to determine whether new cases being reported in other cities in China and elsewhere can be traced back to Wuhan, said Tom Inglesby, director of the Center for Health Security at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

If the disease has been circulatin­g independen­tly in other parts of the country, that informatio­n would affect not only how China contains it, but also how other public health agencies in the world seek to prevent its spread, he said.

Coronaviru­ses are a large family of viruses ranging from the common cold to much more serious diseases and can infect both humans and animals, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

The strain spreading in China is related to two other coronaviru­ses that have caused major outbreaks in recent years: Middle East respirator­y syndrome, also known as MERS, and severe acute respirator­y syndrome, or SARS.

Symptoms of a coronaviru­s infection include respirator­y problems, difficulty breathing, fever and cough, and can lead to severe cases of pneumonia, kidney failure, acute respirator­y syndrome (when fluid builds up in the lungs) and death.

 ?? Greg Gilbert/The Seattle Times via AP ?? Dr. Satish Pillai, of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, speaks at a news conference Tuesday at the state of Washington’s Department of Health Public Health Laboratori­es in Shoreline, Wash.
Greg Gilbert/The Seattle Times via AP Dr. Satish Pillai, of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, speaks at a news conference Tuesday at the state of Washington’s Department of Health Public Health Laboratori­es in Shoreline, Wash.

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