Santa Clara County officials attempt to ease coronavirus risk fears
"This one case, in fact, does not raise the risk to the general public."
"This one case, in fact, does not raise the risk to the general public."
A Santa Clara County man is the first confirmed Bay Area case of the novel coronavirus, which has killed 213 people in China since it first spread to humans in December, county public health officials announced Friday.
The man, whose name and city of residence were not released, traveled to Wuhan, China and Shanghai before returning home to Santa Clara County via the San Jose Mineta International Airport on Jan. 24, according to Dr. Sara Cody, the county’s Public Health Officer and the head of the Santa Clara County Public Health Department.
The man didn’t begin to exhibit symptoms until after he returned home, Cody said at a Friday afternoon press conference.
At the county’s Public Health Laboratory Friday afternoon, Cody said:
“This one case, in fact, does not raise the risk to the general public.”
“He has been self-isolating at home and did not leave home at all except to seek medical care.”
County and state health officials, in cooperation with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, are now in the process of contacting everyone the man may have encountered since his return home, including his fellow airline passengers, Cody said.
In addition to keeping him at home and away from people until he’s no longer considered contagious, Cody said that anyone he was in close contact with will also be kept isolated in their own homes for 14 days.
In an effort to ease fears over the spread of the virus, Cody noted that far more people get sick and die from the flu in the U.S. — 36,000 annually — than have so far been afflicted by the coronavirus, which to date hasn’t resulted in any fatalities in the country.
She also said there is no evidence at the moment that the virus is circulating in the county.
Still, she acknowledged a lot health officials still don’t know much about the coronavirus.
Also on Friday, Alex Azar, head of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, declared a public health emergency due to the spread of the virus and said that anyone who had traveled to Hubei Province in China, where Wuhan is located, within the past 14 days, will be subject to a quarantine of up to 14 days.
Anyone who was in the rest of mainland China will be required to undergo health screenings at one of seven airports: San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, Seattle, Atlanta, Chicago and Honolulu.
Also, foreign citizens who have been in China and “pose a risk” of transmitting the virus, except those who are immediate family of American citizens, will be denied entry into the U.S.
Earlier Friday, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s website listed the number of positive cases in the U.S. at six, with 121 cases awaiting lab results.
The Santa Clara County case brings the total number of U.S. cases to seven.
The virus, which presents with flu-like symptoms, is thought to have spread from animals to humans, perhaps at a large seafood and animal market in Wuhan, China.
Since first appearing, the virus has sickened at least 9,692 people in China, killing 213, according to the National Health Commission of the People’s Republic China.
The commission also reported 4,812 new suspected cases, bringing the total number of suspected infections to 15,238.
The World Health Organization reported Thursday that there were 82 confirmed cases in 18 countries outside of China.
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