The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has only two Division of Quarantine staff members at Honolulu Airport to distribute travel alert cards describing symptoms of the mysterious virus disease that's spreading. Federal and state officials
Epidemic continues to expand
work together to watch for
new cases of mystery illnessBy Helen Altonn
haltonn@starbulletin.com"We are working with the state public health folks and, if there is a need as far as requiring additional folks, we would work with the state and also deploy people from CDC to work alongside our quarantine people," said CDC spokesman Llelwyn Grant.
Three "suspect cases" on Kauai of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, or SARS, are listed by CDC among the 62 cases reported in the United States because they meet the broad definition of the infectious disease.
However, state Epidemiologist Paul Effler believes they aren't true SARS cases because the patients, a Hong Kong traveler and two healthcare workers at Wilcox Memorial Hospital, had minor symptoms and completely recovered.
The World Health Organization has urged airports to ask international passengers about their health at check-in and discourage anyone from flying who had a fever within the previous 24 hours.
The WHO also recommended that airport officials ask passengers if they have a cough or trouble breathing or if they've been in contact with someone with SARS.
"We're working alongside of them (WHO) and passing out cards at various airports describing symptoms connected with SARS and encouraging travelers, if they have any of these symptoms, to consult their physician as soon as possible," Grant said.
"We're primarily concerned about domestic or foreign travelers coming from those locations where there has been a SARS outbreak."
State Health Department
Centers for Disease Control
Hong Kong Department of Health
BACK TO TOP |
ATLANTA >> U.S. health officials said yesterday that none of the antiviral drugs and other treatments they have tested are effective against a flu-like disease that has killed at least 54 people and sickened nearly 1,500 others around the world. Treatments fail to stop
mystery illness' spreadAssociated Press
They also expanded their travel advisory, suggesting that anyone planning nonessential travel to mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore or Hanoi "may wish to postpone their trips until further notice."
"The global epidemic continues to expand," said Dr. Julie Gerberding, head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "We recognize this as an epidemic that is evolving."
The CDC has reported 62 cases of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, in the United States, and at least 35 cases have been reported in Canada, where three people have died.
But the majority of the cases have been in Asia, where the illness is believed to have originated.
Yesterday, the first doctor to realize the world was dealing with an unfamiliar disease died of the illness in Thailand. Dr. Carlo Urbani, 46, of Italy, a World Health Organization expert on communicable diseases, became infected while working in Vietnam, where he diagnosed a U.S. businessman hospitalized in Hanoi, the U.N. agency said. The businessman later died.
U.S. health officials believe the illness comes from a new form of coronavirus, the virus that causes about a fifth of all colds.
Gerberding said yesterday that no successful drugs or treatments had yet been found.
"We have no evidence that any specific antiviral, steroid treatment or other agents that are targeting this virus have any benefit to patients," she said.
Two possible diagnostic tests that detect antibodies, indicating a person's immune system has reacted to the virus, are under development, and CDC officials hope to soon be able to supply those tests to state health departments, CDC officials said.
In Hong Kong, the number of people suffering from flu-like disease increased sharply yesterday to 12 people killed and 470 sickened. Hong Kong health secretary Dr. Yeoh Eng-kiong said more residents likely will become sick. More than 1,000 have been quarantined.
Thousands of Hong Kong residents donned surgical masks but many others refused to venture out, and activity in the usually bustling city stopped. Schools were closed and some companies shut down after workers became sick.
Singapore, which has had two deaths, nearly doubled the number of people quarantined to more than 1,500 on Friday.
The illness appears to have originated in China, which has been criticized for being slow in reporting cases. WHO officials who went to China to investigate the disease said Beijing has promised to improve monitoring of the illness, with daily updates from every province.
"We are desperate to know more about the scope and the magnitude of" SARS in China, Gerberding said. "It's the biggest predictor of where this will be headed in coming weeks."