US, Hong Kong confirm first cases of coronavirus

US, Hong Kong confirm first cases of coronavirus

A Washington state man who recently traveled to China and a man from Macau are diagnosed with the coronavirus, becoming the first confirmed US and Macau cases of the newly identified virus that has killed people in China and rendered some 300 others sick across Asia.

In US, the patient, identified only as a man in his 30s, fell ill over the weekend after traveling to his hometown in China and was diagnosed with the coronavirus on Monday, Washington Governor Jay Inslee told reporters at a press conference in Seattle.

"This is not a moment of high anxiety," Inslee said, reporting that the man was listed in satisfactory condition at Providence Regional Medical Center in Everett, Washington and not known to have infected anyone else.

"This is a low risk. It appears to have a transmission vector that really should not prevent anyone from going anywhere in Snohomish County, except maybe the isolation ward at the hospital," Inslee said.

The coronavirus, which causes respiratory symptoms similar to a cold or flu, has been linked to a seafood market in Wuhan, the largest city in central China with a population of about 11 million. That market has since been shut down.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Washington State say the agency is preparing for more US cases of the coronavirus to emerge, and the CDC raised its travel alert for Wuhan to a level 2, calling for enhanced precautions.

Under that alert level, the CDC recommends travelers to Wuhan should avoid contact with sick people, animals or animal markets.

FIVE US AIRPORTS TO SCREEN PASSENGERS
At the Seattle press conference, CDC Medical Officer Satish Pillai said that all travelers from Wuhan would be directed to five US airports - in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Atlanta and San Francisco - for screening.

CDC officials said they have begun tracking down individuals who came in contact with the patient, who lives alone, to check them for symptoms, but so far have not found any additional patients.

Besides the United States, cases outside of China have been reported in South Korea, Thailand and Japan.

"I don't think looking at what we know so far that this it on the scale of SARS and MERS, the two most significant coronavirus outbreaks that we know from history," Dr Amesh Adalja, from the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security, said in a phone interview with Reuters.

"It is early days in this outbreak and we don't have a good handle on the severity of illness," Adalja added.

The CDC said it has screened more than 1,200 passengers since January 17. None of them have been sent on for additional testing.

The US traveler from Washington state had returned on January 15, arriving at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, which is not on the US list for enhanced screening.

The patient sought care at a medical facility in Everett, Washington, and was treated for the illness. Based on his travel history and symptoms, healthcare professionals suspected the new coronavirus.

Specimens were taken from the patient and sent to the CDC for testing. The agency said it has developed a new test that allowed it to identify the presence of the virus in a traveler.

As is often the case, preliminary information suggests older adults with underlying health conditions may be at increased risk of severe disease, according to the CDC.

The agency is working with health officials in China and globally to better understand the virus and any potential treatments, but US officials have said it could take at least a year of testing before any vaccine could be used on the public.

Macau, the Chinese-ruled gambling hub, confirmed on Wednesday its first case of pneumonia linked to the outbreak of coronavirus strain, China's state news agency Xinhua said.

The patient, a 52-year-old woman, was a tourist from Wuhan and reported to a local hospital on Tuesday afternoon, it said.

The former Portuguese colony's government said last week it issued prevention guidelines to schools and other social service institutions and enhanced temperature screening at maritime terminals and land-based checkpoints.

Health authorities in neighbouring Hong Kong said on Tuesday the city had no confirmed cases of people contracting the Wuhan virus.

Coronaviruses are a family of viruses named because of the crown-like spikes on their surfaces that cause respiratory illnesses ranging from the common cold to the deadly Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS).

mj/