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Tweets from Mayor Bill de Blasio cite two more community COVID ICU cases 40sM & 80sF in NYC which do not appear to be linked to travel or prior cases.

Edited by niman
  • niman changed the title to Two COVID Community Spread Cases In New York City
Posted

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio confirmed Thursday two new cases of COVID-19 — a man and a woman with no known connection to other people recently diagnosed with the virus.

 

“To ensure we are able to test as many people as possible, we urgently need the CDC to increase our supply of COVID-19 test kits and expedite the approval of any testing approaches developed by private companies,” the mayor said in a tweet Thursday morning.

The two new cases increase the city’s total cases to four, according to de Blasio. New York City is also investigating at least 5 others for the virus, according to city’s website.

Earlier in the day, de Blasio told MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” that local health officials had found “four people as of this morning who have tested positive.”

“Of the tests we’ve completed, 25 have come back negative so far,” he said.

Representatives from New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene declined to share with CNBC what hospitals the patients are being treated in.

On Sunday, New York officials confirmed the state’s first coronavirus case, a woman who recently traveled to Iran and is currently isolated in her Manhattan home. 

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo confirmed Wednesday five new COVID-19 cases in the state — hours after he said that a family of four in Westchester all had the virus. The two new cases Thursday bring the state’s total to at least 13. 

As of Wednesday, there are at least 129 cases of the new coronavirus in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. At least 49 of those cases are people who were evacuated from Wuhan, China, the epicenter of the outbreak, and the Diamond Princess cruise ship. At least 24 are travel-related infections, while 16 were caused by person-to-person spread. U.S. health officials are also investigating 40 other cases with currently no clear reason for infection, the CDC said.

Earlier this week, a top CDC official said the World Health Organization will likely deem the coronavirus a global pandemic once sustained person-to-person spread takes hold outside China.

The outbreak already meets two of the three main criteria under the technical designation of a pandemic, Dr. Anne Schuchat, principal deputy director of the CDC, said in prepared remarks to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions.

The U.S. currently has just 1% of the required respirator masks that would be needed for medical professionals if the COVID-19 outbreak erupts into a pandemic, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. House and Senate leaders reached a bipartisan deal Wednesday providing roughly $8.3 billion in emergency funding to help fight the outbreak in the U.S. It sets aside just $1 billion for medical supplies and health-care preparedness, according to a House Democratic aide. 

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/03/05/new-york-city-confirms-two-new-cases-of-coronavirus-contracted-through-community-spread.html?__source=iosappshare|com.apple.UIKit.activity.PostToTwitter

Posted

Statement from Mayor de Blasio on Two New Covid-19 Cases in New York City

March 5, 2020

“There are two new confirmed cases of COVID-19 in New York City.  One new patient is a man in his 40s, and one new patient is a woman in her 80s. Neither patient has a connection to travel nor any of the other local individuals diagnosed with COVID-19.  Both are currently hospitalized and in the intensive care unit. City disease detectives are tracing close contacts of both individuals and will ensure they are appropriately isolated and tested immediately. 

We are going to see more cases like this as community transmission becomes more common. We want New Yorkers to be prepared and vigilant, not alarmed. We are taking the same decisive steps in every case to shut transmission down: isolate and test each suspected case, trace close contacts, and isolate and test them as well. 

To ensure we are able to test as many people as possible, we urgently need the CDC to increase our supply of COVID-19 test kits and expedite the approval of any testing approaches developed by private companies. Our single greatest challenge is the lack of fast federal action to increase testing capacity—without that, we cannot beat this epidemic back.”

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