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A Southern California city is banning people who were on the coronavirus-stricken Diamond Princess cruise ship from entering their town

Published by Business Insider on Thu, 27 Feb 2020


Leaders of Costa Mesa, California, are blocking COVID-19 patients from being transferred to a nearly-empty hospital in the Southern California city.A US district judge issued the restraining order last week and extended it until Monday, during which time state and federal officials will share more of their plans regarding housing patients in Costa Mesa.The CDC said federal health officials had no plans to transfer the patients, and that talks to do so were "preparatory."The 30 to 50 patients who would be transferred were passengers aboard the Diamond Princess, a cruise ship whose quarantine resulted in 42 of the 57 confirmed cases of the coronavirus in the US.The transferred patients would be those exhibiting moderate, not severe, symptoms who have not received CDC confirmation testing positive for the virus but likely will based on estimated rates of infection.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.City officials in Costa Mesa, California, are blocking patients being tested for the coronavirus disease COVID-19 from being transferred to a nearly empty hospital within the Orange County city from a Bay Area air force base.On February 21, US District Judge Josephine Staton in Costa Mesaa town in Southern California about 40 miles southeast of Los Angelesissued a restraining order blocking the transfer of these patients from the Travis Air Force Base in Fairfield, California, to the Fairview Developmental Center, a California-owned hospital in Costa Mesa once used to house residents with developmental and intellectual disabilities.The city said in a press releasethat federal officials did not formally work with city leaders on the transfer of patients to the Costa Mesa facility. The Fairview facility is also surrounded by several residential neighborhoods in a heavily populated area."Our top priority is the safety and security of this community and those who live in this region," Costa Mesa Mayor Katrina Foley said in the press release. "We have received no information regarding how the facility will be prepared, what precautions will be taken to protect those in the facility as well as those who live nearby, and other important planning measures."Motivated by concerned city residents, the judge approved the restraining order temporarily on February 21 and has extended it this week. The order is in place until Monday. In the meantime, state and federal authorities will share more about their plans to house the patients in the Costa Mesa community.SEE ALSO:How the 'failed' quarantine of the Diamond Princess cruise ship started with 10 coronavirus cases and ended with more than 690A CDC spokesperson told the Sacramento Bee that federal health officials had no hard plans to move forward with the transfer and that conversation to do so was merely "preparatory."State officials had proposed a contingency plan after the Department of Defense informed them that patients who tested positive must be moved from the base.Source: The Sacramento BeeThe proposed plan would involve moving about 30 to 50 people from the Travis Air Force Base to the Costa Mesa facility.Source: The San Francisco ChronicleThe patients, many of whom are reportedly California residents, were passengers on the Diamond Princess cruise ship and are being tested for the coronavirus disease, or COVID-19.The patients being considered for transfer are reportedly exhibiting moderate symptoms and have not received confirmation from the CDC that they have tested positive for the virus. But according to the San Francisco Chronicle, they likely will test positive for the coronavirus disease, based on estimated rates of infection.The transfer would not include the passengers from the cruise ship that have infections confirmed by the CDC. Those were taken to local hospitals for treatment, not to the Travis Air Force Base in Fairfield, California, which is about 50 miles northeast of San Francisco. One of those passengers is being treated in San Francisco.Source: The New York Times and Business InsiderThe Diamond Princess cruise ship had been quarantined for 14 days after a man who had been on the ship tested positive for the coronavirus on February 1.The morning after the former passenger tested positive for the virus, 10 people on board the ship also were confirmed to have contracted it. That number ballooned to more than 690 cases over the course of the two-week quarantine and testing, during which time passengers were confined to their rooms.Health experts criticized the decision to quarantine passengers on the ship. One microbiologist told the Montreal Gazette that the ship served as more of an incubator for the virus more than a quarantine."The quarantine was not justified, and violated the individual rights of the passengers while allowing the virus to literally pick them off one-by-one," Dr. Amesh Adalja, who works at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, told Business Insider in an email.Four passengers in their 80s died.After returning from the quarantine aboard the cruise ship, about 150 passengers were brought to Fairfield's Travis Air Force Base for an additional government-mandated quarantine.Some evacuees were also sent to Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas.Source: The San Francisco ChronicleCalifornia state attorneys told the Chronicle that Costa Mesa's restraining order is "based on speculation and unfounded internet fear" that is preventing cruise ship evacuees who have tested positive for the virus from receiving shelter.Source: The San Francisco ChronicleOnly the patients who have the virus with mild symptoms that don't require hospital treatment would be transferred, the state said.Dr. Stephen Parodi, an infectious disease expert at Kaiser Permanente, told the Chronicle that it was sensible to separate coronavirus patients with moderate symptoms from those exhibiting more severe reactions.The coronavirus disease has now infected 80,000 people, with most cases in China where the new coronavirus originated. The US has confirmed 60 cases of the virus, including 42 people who were passengers on the Diamond Princess cruise ship.The latest US patient is a California resident and had no known exposure to the virus, suggesting that this is the first case of "community spread."For the latest case total, death toll, and travel information, see Business Insider's live updates here.
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