Swordsmyth
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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/
Getting to be too many to keep track of now...
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.
The foreign ministry issued an urgent appeal for protective medical equipment as the total number of casualties reached 361, surpassing deaths in mainland China caused by the 2002-03 Sars virus. The number of infections also jumped, passing 17,200.
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https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...deaths-chinese-province-centre-outbreak-hubei
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/
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
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.
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
Good news if there is no asymptomatic transmission.
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/