First case of China-linked coronavirus reported in US

Getting to be too many to keep track of now...

There are now 11 cases of the new coronavirus confirmed in the United Sates. Six are in California, two are in Illinois and there is one each in Arizona, Massachusetts and Washington state, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (See the map above for locations with confirmed cases).
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In the United States, nine of the 11 people with the virus had recently traveled to Wuhan. There are two cases of transmission between spouses.

San Benito County: A 57-year-old man who had traveled to Wuhan was tested positive for the virus and subsequently transmitted it to his wife, according to officials on Sunday.

Santa Clara County: The first Bay Area case was identified on Jan. 31; a man returned from Wuhan and Shanghai on Jan. 24 and only left his home for medical care. A second unrelated case was confirmed in the county on Feb. 1 — a woman who had visited Wuhan stayed at home except to go to a medical clinic on two separate occasions.

Los Angeles County: A resident of Wuhan tested positive for the virus in a screening while transiting through LAX on his return trip to China on Jan. 22.

Orange County: A man travelling from Wuhan tested positive for the virus on Jan. 26 and is in isolation.

Boston: A man in his 20s tested positive for the virus and health officials confirmed the case on Feb 2.

Chicago: A woman in her 60s was confirmed to have the virus on Jan. 24, and less than a week later her husband was diagnosed.

Tempe, Arizona: On Jan. 26, a man who had recently returned from Wuhan identified as having the virus.

Washington state: A 30-something man tested positive on Jan. 21 and was the first confirmed case in the country. The patient from Snohomish County was in satisfactory condition as of Thursday, according to KOMO.
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https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/where-are-the-coronavirus-cases-United-States-US-15026142.php
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The new cases include a Massachusetts resident and four Californians. Four of the five had traveled to Wuhan, China -- epicenter for the outbreak of the virus, known as 2019 n-CoV -- while the fifth involved a "close contact" with one of the travelers.

That last case is the second involving person-to-person transmission that has been confirmed in the United States, officials.
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https://www.upi.com/Health_News/202...-person-transmission-confirmed/5131580747448/
 
Nothing like fleeing in a plane while you are infected...wonder if he had a mask on for the entire flight?

The LA patient alerted authorities that he wasn't feeling well upon arriving at Los Angeles International Airport. The patient was taken by ambulance to a hospital, health officials said at a Sunday news conference.

"Everything worked as it should," said Dr. Sharon Balter with the LA County Department of Public Health. "The patient presented for care, the patient was immediately transported to a hospital, the patient has remained in the hospital."

Officials did not provide details about the patient, except to say that the individual was a traveler from Wuhan, China.
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https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/...f-deadly-novel-coronavirus-confirmed/2298402/
 
The novel coronavirus identified at the end of December has infected more than 20,000 people around the world.
The outbreak originated in the central Chinese city of Wuhan. China's Health Commission reported Sunday that among those infected there, 475 people have made full recoveries and 361 have died. The rest are still being treated.
Zhan Qingyuan, director of pneumonia prevention and treatment at the China-Japan Friendship Hospital, said even people who have recovered may not be immune to the virus.
"For those patients who have been cured, there is a likelihood of a relapse," he said in a briefing on Friday. "The antibody will be generated; however, in certain individuals, the antibody cannot last that long."


"With many infectious diseases, a person can develop immunity against a specific strain after exposure or infection," Amira Roess, a professor of Global Health and Epidemiology at George Mason University, told Business Insider. "Often, that person will not get sick again upon subsequent exposure to it. Regarding this specific strain of coronavirus, scientists are working to answer this question."
Doctors and virologists don't yet know enough about the Wuhan coronavirus to say whether humans develop full immunity after they've contracted the illness. According to Zhan, doctors aren't sure that the antibodies patients develop are strong or long-lasting enough to keep them from contracting the disease again.

More at: https://www.businessinsider.com/wuhan-coronavirus-risk-of-reinfection-2020-2
 
* * * Update (0108ET): A woman was reportedly shot dead by police after attempting to breach a quarantine blockade in Wuzu Town approximately 50 miles from Wuhan.

At Wuzu Town, Huangmei County in #Hubei , a woman was said to have shot dead after she attempted to break the blockade set up to contain #coronavirus . 湖北省黄梅县五祖镇 , 据说这名妇女因强闯 #武汉肺炎 封锁线被警察打死。#CoronavirusOutbreak
何不 #全民自救 #全民互救pic.twitter.com/HqEvzSknz2
— 曾錚 Jennifer Zeng (@jenniferatntd) February 4, 2020
Elsewhere:
A medic wants to take woman's temperature. She refuses. They beat each other. #Coronavirus panic. #WuhanCoronavirus #CoronavirusOutbreak
男子给女子量体温,女子不干,两人大打出手。#武汉肺炎 恐慌中,我们还要看多少众生态?
为何不 #全民自救 #全民互救 #不怕中共 #戰勝恐懼 #傳播真相pic.twitter.com/W3ZRlTlxhm
— 曾錚 Jennifer Zeng (@jenniferatntd) February 4, 2020
In Nanchang, Jiangxi Province, someone failed to disclose he came from #Wuhan, and had been to everywhere. After he was confirmed to have #coronavirus, angry people beaten his family.
南昌某小区,有人从武汉回来未上报,四处走动,确诊患 #武汉肺炎 后,家人遭追打 。 pic.twitter.com/HXQULU5pTB
— 曾錚 Jennifer Zeng (@jenniferatntd) February 4, 2020
【武汉一周建成“方舱医院”】
【床位相隔2尺、无阻隔】
2月3日晚,武汉市建了三所“方舱医院”,分别是洪山体育馆(800床位)、武汉客厅(2000床位)、国际会展中心(1000床位),专门收治轻症肺炎患者。
有网民质疑,病人之间几乎零隔离,上千人共用有限洗手间和浴室设备,犹如一个集中营。

网上视频 pic.twitter.com/YbLE2XCFxz
— 自由亚洲电台 (@RFA_Chinese) February 4, 2020
* * *
Update (2120ET): According to Hong Kong State TV, officials just confirmed the first death from coronavirus: a 39-year-old patient has become the first to die in Hong Kong from an illness related to the deadly coronavirus. The man, who was being treated in Princess Margaret Hospital in Kwai Chung, died on Tuesday morning due to sudden heart failure, according to three medical sources.
According to the government, the deceased man had lived in Whampoa Garden with his mother. She was confirmed on February 2 as Hong Kong’s 15th case, but did not have a recent history of travel.
This is the second death outside of mainland China from the deadly virus.
To make matters worse, thousands of Hong Kong medical workers went on strike for a second day on Tuesday to demand that leader Carrie Lam immediately close the city’s border with the mainland to prevent the spread of a deadly coronavirus.
* * *
Update (1850ET): In what is by far the largest dump of coronavirus cases so for, Beijing just announced more than 3,000 new confirmed cases.
Beijing is now reporting 3235 newly confirmed cases (2345 in Hubei Province) and 492 severe cases (442 in Hubei Province). And that's not all. China is reporting 171,329 cases under observation, up 18,629 overnight, along with 23,214 suspected cases.
There are now 20,438 confirmed cases in China, and another 154 outside China, bringing the total global count to 20,592. Meanwhile, 632 have been cured and discharged.
As a reminder, we don't know quite yet what the real mortality rate of nCoV-2019 is. It's still early days and nobody is sure of the numbers out of China. But Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health told CNBC on Monday that a quarter of China’s coronavirus cases require intensive treatment.
"About 25% of them have very serious disease, requiring relatively intensive or really intensive care," said Fauci, the director of the NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Fauci has participated in some of the CDC's press conferences.
Read the full statement from China's NIH below:
At 04:00 on February 3, 31 provinces (autonomous regions, municipalities) and the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps reported 3235 newly confirmed cases (2345 in Hubei Province) and 492 severe cases (442 in Hubei Province). There were 64 death cases (64 cases in Hubei Province), 157 newly cured cases (101 cases in Hubei Province), and 5,072 suspected cases (3182 cases in Hubei Province).
As of 24:00 on February 3, the National Health and Health Commission has received a cumulative report of 20,438 confirmed cases (2 nuclear reductions in Heilongjiang Province) in 31 provinces (autonomous regions, municipalities) and the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps. There are currently 2788 severe cases with cumulative deaths.
There were 425 cases, 632 cases were cured and discharged, and there were 23214 suspected cases. At present, 221,015 close contacts have been tracked.
12,755 people were released from medical observation on the same day, and 171,329 people are currently receiving medical observation. A total of 33 confirmed cases were reported in Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan: 15 in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, 8 in the Macao Special Administrative Region, and 10 in Taiwan.
So much for 'contained'...
2020-02-03%20%281%29_0.png

* * *
Update (1840ET): A Korean newspaper just reported that President Xi may delay a planned visit to South Korea to focus on dealing with the coronavirus outbreak. Xi reportedly said during a Politburo meeting Monday that he would punish local officials for failing to successfully suppress the virus, a process of scapegoating that has already begun, as we noted earlier.
* * *
Update (1720ET): It's early Tuesday morning and China, which means we're getting another batch of statistics about the coronavirus outbreak - statistics that likely underplay the severity of the outbreak.
According to Chinese health authorities, 2,345 were confirmed on Monday, while another 64 died (including 48 in Wuhan alone).
Hubei Province is now reporting 13,522 cases of coronavirus infection (including 6384 in Wuhan), while 58,544 are under observation across China. 46 new deaths were reported overnight, bringing the death toll in China to at least 425.
For those who are keeping score at home, that's a 18% rise in deaths overnight.
Another terrifying video shows a man collapsing in a virus-induced fit.
Terrifying. Surveillance video catching the moment of man collapsing maybe dying in less than a minute during #CoronavirusOutbreak . No wonder so many fell on streets. 不到一分鐘就過去了。怪不得那麼多倒地斃的。#武漢肺炎 pic.twitter.com/5jjE1GnfT2
— 曾錚 Jennifer Zeng (@jenniferatntd) February 3, 2020
Meanwhile, President Xi is cracking the whip. According to the SCMP, at a meeting of the Politburo Standing Committee, President Xi Jinping said local cadres would be punished severely if they failed to heed Beijing’s orders to stop the virus from spreading.
"[We] must treat the fight of the outbreak as the most important task at hand," Xi was quoted by state broadcaster CCTV as saying.
Punishments of local officials has already started; more than 400 have already been 'penalized', according to Nikkei. Meanwhile, the party has acknowledged that it shouldn't have arrested a group of doctors in December for allegedly spreading 'disinformation' (they were trying to warn the world of the outbreak - yet the WHO has praised China for being 'transparent').
Screen%20Shot%202020-02-03%20at%205.29.33%20PM.png

Looks like everything is under control.
* * *

More at: https://www.zerohedge.com/geopoliti...atients-swarm-wuhan-hospital-hong-kong-closes
 
A little bit of good news about coronavirus: The number of new cases outside mainland China is currently declining:
Jan. 31: 28 new cases
Feb. 1: 14 new cases
Feb. 2: 11 new cases
Feb. 3: 6 new cases
— BNO Newsroom (@BNODesk) February 3, 2020

 
A little bit of good news about coronavirus: The number of new cases outside mainland China is currently declining:
Jan. 31: 28 new cases
Feb. 1: 14 new cases
Feb. 2: 11 new cases
Feb. 3: 6 new cases
— BNO Newsroom (@BNODesk) February 3, 2020


This is going to be studied for decades to come. Transmission, susceptibility, quarantine, etc. is it really Asian males that are most at risk? Why hasn’t the spread outside China gone parabolic like inside?

This is some scary shit and I believe the commies know it, thus the overwhelming response. You don’t quarantine 60 million people, build hospitals and lock people in their homes for a nothingburger. Unfortunately, absent medical facilities to treat the ill, a full blown quarantine is the only way to combat the spread. Those poor peasants are living a real-life Contagion/Outbreak scenario.

Time will tell, due to the long incubation period, but it seems the risk to the rest of the world ex-ASEAN countries is small. The reported successful use of HIV/AIDS treatments along with traditional flu treatments is interesting considering the theory of a bio-engineered weapon getting loose (intentionally or otherwise).

USA may be far from its past glory and marching towards full blown socialism, but I’m glad I’m here with what freedoms I have left than just about anywhere else.
 
Good news if there is no asymptomatic transmission.

Asymptomatic transmission of the novel coronavirus in Germany was called into doubt on Monday when an article appeared to question the research behind it.

Science magazine detailed errors in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) research letter published last Thursday. The letter reported that asymptomatic transmission of novel coronavirus occurred in Bavaria, Germany, when several co-workers of an asymptomatic woman traveling from China contracted the virus.

The letter, and several media reports, said that the woman wasn't sick when she was in Germany and only began to feel ill on the plane ride home. Turns out that wasn't quite true.

Researchers who wrote the NEJM letter did not speak to the woman herself, according to Science. But after she spoke to officials from the Robert Koch Institute, Germany's public health agency, and Bavarian officials, she said that she "felt tired, suffered from muscle pain," and took fever-lowering medication while in Germany.

While Germany's health agency spokespeople would only confirm that the woman had symptoms, the Robert Koch Institute has submitted a letter to NEJM, presumably to correct the record.

China has claimed to have data showing asymptomatic transmission occurring within the country, but U.S. health officials previously said that they did not have enough data to make that claim. That appeared to change after the publication of the NEJM letter.
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https://www.medpagetoday.com/infectiousdisease/publichealth/84688
 
Eerie footage of Wuhan engulfed in a thick fog has fuelled concerns the death toll inside coronavirus-hit China is “higher” than what’s been officially reported.
Clips appear to show the city in a mysterious haze which residents say has “come out of nowhere”.
The videos have led to concerns that the smog is the result of smoke from crematoriums burning coronavirus-infected bodies "24 hours a day".
It comes a day after the National Health Commission in China ordered all coronavirus fatalities to be cremated, with burials and funerals banned, to prevent to spread of disease.
Chinese nationals voiced their concerns on social media, suggesting the death toll could be "unthinkably higher" than reports if incinerators are running all day.
1_Screen-Shot-2020-02-04-at-093402.jpg



Residents have also expressed concern over the air pollution in city which hasn't dropped below Wuhan's annual average since last week.
According to the World Air Map Wuhan’s pollution level is at “dangerous” with highs of 121 AQI, despite the fact the city has been in lockdown for over a week.

More at: https://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/latest-news/fears-thick-death-smog-over-21426098
 
https://twitter.com/Koondey1/status/1224827004169490432


The guy has been on the verge of death since 2012. He could never give up alcohol.

A family history of liver disease plus alcohol was my undoing. In 2012, I developed chronic liver failure. After a few years living on the edge of death, I was fortunate enough to receive a liver transplant after relocating to Toronto. The transplant was a success and kept me alive to work on various publications and my HIV research. But, I soon went back to scotch to fill some void in me. Alcohol became an addiction at that point, not just a self-medicating stress releaser. I craved it.
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http://health.sunnybrook.ca/brain/brain-surgery-helped-battle-alcohol-use-disorder/
 
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