From Yahoo/Time:
“Coronavirus Containment Efforts
in the U.S. Could Disrupt 'People's Day-to-Day Lives,' CDC Warns”
(The Red are States with confirmed cases and the Blue are States with suspected cases.)
As the number of people infected
with a novel coronavirus known as COVID-19 has ticked up worldwide—totaling
more than 80,000 as of Tuesday afternoon—the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) has routinely emphasized that the risk to Americans
remains relatively low. But that tone changed
somewhat during a call with reporters Tuesday, when Dr. Nancy Messonnier,
Director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases
warned that community spread appears imminent, and disruption to U.S.
communities could be significant. “It is not a question of if coronavirus will
spread through the United States,” Messonnier said, “but a question of when and
how many people will have severe illness.” So far, person-to-person spread of
COVID-19 has been minimal in the U.S. Most confirmed cases have been among
Americans who traveled to areas where COVID-19 is more widespread, and these
people have been treated and isolated accordingly. That’s crucial to the
containment of disease, as spread within communities greatly increases the total
number of cases and the likelihood that transmission will multiply. Messonnier
said the growing number of countries that have seen the virus pass from person
to person in significant numbers is worrying, and something the U.S. should
consider. “I’m concerned about the situation. CDC is concerned about the
situation,” Messonnier said, adding that now is the time for businesses,
hospitals, schools and families to start preparing for a potential domestic
outbreak. On the call, Messonnier laid out steps communities and individuals
may have to take if person-to-person spread picks up, including school and
workplace closures; voluntary home quarantines; postponing or canceling mass
gatherings; and implementing surface cleaning measures in schools, homes and
public places. Depending on the extent to which these measures become necessary,
schools and businesses may have to conduct classes and work over the phone or
internet platforms, she said. Hospitals may have to ask patients to delay
elective procedures and conduct other appointments using telemedicine. While
these steps have not yet been taken, even noting their possibility is a marked
escalation from some of the CDC’s prior advice on coronavirus containment,
which has mostly been limited to frequent hand-washing and covering coughs and
sneezes. “We recognize that implementing [measures] at this level will be
disruptive to people’s day-to-day lives” if they become necessary, Messonnier
said, noting possibilities such as lost income and the need for alternate
childcare arrangements. “We want to prepare people for that possibility.” At a
Tuesday afternoon press conference, officials with the Health and Human
Services Department (HHS) and Principal Deputy Director of the CDC Anne
Schuchat, said Messonnier’s comments were intended only for the public to be
aware of what could happen down the line. “Dr. Messonnier’s comments were
really to frame what might happen in the future,” Schuchat said. “It’s very
important to say that our efforts at containment so far have worked, and the
virus is actually contained here in the United States. We don’t want to delay
thinking about other possibilities, and it was really an educational moment
that she talked about.” Messonnier also raised another concern on the call,
noting that there could be shortages of supplies like protective gear for
health care workers in the event of a pandemic. Overseas, many Asian countries
affected by COVID-19 have run short of supplies like face masks. At the Tuesday
HHS press conference, Stephen Hahn, U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
commissioner, told reporters the agency is monitoring for any possible
shortages of medical products, including protective products like masks. Though
there are no shortages in the U.S. for those products, he said the FDA will
continue to monitor. Despite the gravity of her advice, Messonnier emphasized
that the CDC routinely plans for pandemic situations, in the hopes of
over-preparing for a situation that turns out to be of no great risk. “I don’t
think that preparedness will ever go to waste,” she told reporters.
^ It seems the US does have cause
for concern – unlike what the WHO and CDC have been saying. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/coronavirus-containment-efforts-u-could
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