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Medicine United States

Coronavirus Patient Visited San Antonio Hotel, Mall After She Was 'Mistakenly Released' From Isolation, Officials Say (dallasnews.com) 130

A woman that tested positive for coronavirus was "mistakenly released" from isolation Saturday, causing the mayor of San Antonio to declare a public health emergency in the city. Dallas News reports: The patient was one of 91 evacuees who were brought to San Antonio from Wuhan, China. She was released Saturday and was in the community for a little more than 12 hours before she was quarantined again. During that time, the woman checked into a Holiday Inn hotel near the San Antonio airport and took a hotel shuttle to the North Star Mall, said Dr. Anita Kurian of the city's Metropolitan Health District. She was at the mall from about 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Kurian said the health department completed its risk assessment of any people the woman could have exposed to the virus and determined that everyone was at low risk, except for health-care personnel who were in direct contact with the woman when she was released.

The CDC said the patient had been treated at a local medical facility for several weeks after she returned from Wuhan on a flight chartered by the State Department. "At the time of discharge from the facility, the patient was asymptomatic and met all of CDC's criteria for release -- resolution of any symptoms and two consecutive sets of negative test results, collected more than 24 hours apart," the agency said. After the patient was released, a lab test was determined to be "weakly positive." The patient was brought back into isolation "out of an abundance of caution," the CDC said.
"We simply cannot have a screw-up like this from our federal partners," San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg said at a news conference Monday.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott also criticized the CDC, saying: "What the CDC did is completely unacceptable. It appears to be a case of negligence with regard to allowing this person who had coronavirus to leave Texas Center for Infectious Disease and go back into the general population. I think they understand the magnitude of the error."
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Coronavirus Patient Visited San Antonio Hotel, Mall After She Was 'Mistakenly Released' From Isolation, Officials Say

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  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Monday March 02, 2020 @08:09PM (#59789826)

    Goddammit!

  • by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Monday March 02, 2020 @08:11PM (#59789830)

    Oldest trick in the contagion spread book.

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 ) on Monday March 02, 2020 @10:56PM (#59790268) Homepage

      The CDC performed as expected after decades of tax cuts for the richest and cuts to funding because fuck only the poor die. Why is it performing so badly because it was designed to perform badly, be a PR entity, to function mostly in name, as funding was cut. You will now reap the reward of insatiable greed. The USA will react to this infection as poorly as a third world country because many of it's essential services were cut, contracted out to serve greed rather than the pretend service and staffed with political appointees whose only qualifications were getting a corrupt politician elected.

      Years of psychopathic management of essential US government services have left them functioning in name only, as holding containers for nepotism and crony capitalism, incompetence will abound and the outcomes will be extremely bad.

      The repeated failures at handling natural disasters set of zero warning bells but the escape from prosecution for failure certainly set the stage for greater corruption. It will probably be significantly safer to leave the USA, rather than rely on corrupted government services.

      • This is so off the charts that I'm guessing you're possibly being paid to troll. I would have thought a more subtle approach would be better.
  • Not surprising (Score:5, Insightful)

    by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Monday March 02, 2020 @08:23PM (#59789862)

    The con artist cut the budget for the CDC, then fired the CDC pandemic response team, and has once again proposed cuts to the CDC, and to top it all off, put a guy who believes prayer will cure all ills in charge of coordinating the response.

    So yeah, not surprising stuff like this happens. After all, who needs experts?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by kaoshin ( 110328 )

      "funding was restored and even increased in bills that Trump ultimately signed."
      "top national security officials handling pandemics left abruptly and were not replaced by the Trump administration."

      https://www.politifact.com/fac... [politifact.com]

      "Pence appointed a doctor, Ambassador Debbie Birx, to serve as White House response coordinator for the virus, enforced tight control of the governments public communications and added new members to a task force aimed at containing the spread of the outbreak."

      https://www.washingto [washingtonpost.com]

      • Re:Not surprising (Score:5, Informative)

        by Cyberax ( 705495 ) on Monday March 02, 2020 @09:18PM (#59790024)

        So no funding was cut

        Liar, liar, pants on fire. CDC budget 2016: $12.172B, CDC budget in 2018: $11.059B.

        So budget was cut, and rather drastically: https://www.hhs.gov/about/budg... [hhs.gov]

        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by Train0987 ( 1059246 )

          Congress is responsible for the budget, not the President. Who's lying?

          • Re:Not surprising (Score:4, Interesting)

            by Cyberax ( 705495 ) on Monday March 02, 2020 @09:43PM (#59790088)
            The cuts were done by the Republican administration (the 2018 budget was passed in 2017, under Republicans), after being proposed by the President. So yep, Trump owns this mess wholesale.
        • But how much was obligated? BTW, that is NOT a drastic cut. been there through real drastic cuts--hint: this ain't one of them.
          • 9% is a pretty big cut
            • by Straif ( 172656 )

              Most, if not all of the actual decreases in the CDC budget over the past few years are due to expiring programs.

              When certain outbreaks become the newest it thing monies are transferred to the CDC to deal with those. AIDS, Ebola, H1N1 etc.. all get special programs which generally run for a certain number of years and then expire taking their funding with them.

        • by kaoshin ( 110328 )

          Liar, liar, pants on fire. CDC budget 2016: $12.172B, CDC budget in 2018: $11.059B.

          I was accurately paraphrasing the linked politifact article and made no claims of my own. You are also making a strawman argument. Neither the article nor I claimed the overall FY2018 budget was larger, but rather that there were key proposed changes made by Trump which were overruled and actually increased by Congress. Annual funding for emerging and zoonotic infectious diseases has regularly increased despite lower budget recommendations which congress normally exceeds anyway. https://infogram.com/unt [infogram.com]

        • Re:Not surprising (Score:5, Informative)

          by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Tuesday March 03, 2020 @12:14AM (#59790438)
          The cuts in health spending in recent history happened predominantly under Obama [aaas.org] (in inflation-adjusted dollars). The biggest increases in recent history were under Bush, from 2001-2004. Then gradually decreased to 2008. Under Obama, health spending held steady for a few years, then continued to decline, until 2016 when it ticked up slightly. Under Trump these increases have continued. Although funding for specific programs may have been cut, overall funding has increased.

          If you scroll further down the AAAS link, you can see the budget changes specifically for the CDC from 2018 to 2019. Spending on Influenza and Influenza planning and response, HIV prevention and research, and infectious diseases and the opioid epidemic were actually increased. The cuts mostly fell in antibiotics resistance research, prevention research centers, and environmental health. I'm not knowledgeable enough about these departs to say with certainty, but based on the names it sounds like funding for the programs which would've been involved containing this coronavirus from spreading, were all increased. (The prevention research centers [cdc.gov] deal with more mundane disease threats, not pandemics.)

          Note that the "2020 budget" is markedly lower because it's a budget request, not the actual budget. For those who don't know how the U.S. Federal budgeting process works, the President only requests a budget. Congress is the one who actually makes the budget, and they can completely ignore the President's request if they wish (and they frequently do). The President then signs or vetoes the budget Congress gives him. That's why I listed budget changes in the first paragraph as "under" a certain President, rather than attributing it to the President.

          Trump has been requesting lowball amounts almost across the board [aaas.org]. In previous years, the House and Senate have brought those back up to final funding levels (moreso the Senate, than the House, contrary to your attempts to cast this as a Republican hatchet job), and the President has signed off on it. Unfortunately this is the first time I've seen that page on the AAAS website, so I don't know if this lowballing is typical of Presidents, or particular to Trump.
        • 11 billion? How can they even remotely perform their duties on such a small amount of income.

    • by Qualia ( 4941841 )
      But, having removed so many experts from the government; you can then point out how much a failure government agencies are and so sell lots more "Make America Great Again" hats.
    • I'm sure he's spoken with several renown experts, inside and outside the U.S., before making these tough decisions.

      You have to look at it from Trump's point of view. How is he going to get away with cancelling the election if there isn't a credible threat?

    • "So yeah, not surprising stuff like this happens. After all, who needs experts?"

      And people with no or bad insurance won't go to a hospital because they fear they'd get a 5000$ bill and be quarantined and lose their job and since the hospital doesn't have any treatment other than a handful tamiflu which just lets you die a day later, why bother?
      Either you get it or you don't, either you die or you don't.

      In other developed countries your test and scanners are free and medial leave is paid for so you just stay

      • It would be great if Trump set aside medical reimbursement so those who are quarantined aren't jobless and broke when it's done. Too bad we blew all that money buying the votes of the farmers after starting a trade war.

      • Tamiflu is only first line defense. There are other anti-virals being used for influenza but are reserved for at-risk populations so that we don't see any mutated immune virus any time soon.

        For COVID-19, there are also some HIV treatments that are having success on this virus.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      true [snopes.com]

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      While all of your assertions are true, I don't think they are relevant to this case. More relevant is that a lot of the test kits have been defective. And that may not be what happened either.

      Consider "an abundance of caution". "Weakly positive". She was probably perfectly safe to wander about...but probably isn't good enough when people get scared.

      The real thing making COVID-19 impossible to contain is that many cases are asymptomatic, but still contagious. And an infectious period of up to 6 weeks.

    • He didn't fire the pandemic response team, they left on their own. Probably after being told to use puppets in their briefings, but still.
  • Maybe a better name would be "Coronavirus Carly"?
    • Maybe a better name would be "Coronavirus Carly"?

      I've heard that if you chant that three times while standing in front of a mirror, she will appear...

      • Maybe a better name would be "Coronavirus Carly"?

        I've heard that if you chant that three times while standing in front of a mirror, she will appear...

        ...hopefully holding a 6-pack of some "Beer Who Cannot Be Named." I'd take a sip. (Well, just; I like other beers better.)

        Jeez guys, it's not an insta-kill effect or the Spanish Flu (yet)

        [1918 Pandemic (H1N1 virus)]
        Link 1 [wikipedia.org]
        Link 2 [cdc.gov]
        This infected 500 million people worldwide or 27% of the worlds population. The death toll is estimated at 40-50 up to possibly 100 million.


        Or... 10% up to 20% of infected people DIED. Don't get me wrong, that's a _LOT_. But there's also 80% of sick people who DIDN'T

  • by Anonymous Coward
    As someone in the medical profession for a few decades: Do not order a lab test unless you're going to follow up on it and are going to do something about it. In this case, they apparently ordered another screening then released her before the results were available. After she was back in the general population, the test came back positive. Then the mayor goes out and incites widespread panic. In San Antonio right now stores look like something out of Hurricane Katrina. You can't even buy hand soap or toile
    • Is that the same mayor who was briefly running for congress and making up a bunch of weird claims about Trump (Kinda like those "80% CUT!!!!" claims which are pure bunk; or the Trump claimed it's a hoax--also bunk if you actually bothered to listen to the speech instead of listening to CNN/NYT)
    • Thankfully, I'm set up well and have two years of food over here. (Yeah, I'm one of /those/).

      I bet you're handing out quite a few "I told you so"s right about now.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      That's not how I read TFA. The patient was released because she met the diagnostic criteria for being virus free (2 consecutive negative rt-PCRs), and it was only after the test results were re-evaluated that one of them was reclassified as "weakly positive".

      Ultimately this traces back to the CDC deciding to develop its own test kit and then having problems with that kit. Leaving local public health agencies without a kit means that ALL the testing in the USA so far has had to go through CDC, which only ha

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      The CDC looked after the USA for decades without too many problems.
      Now a very political CDC suddenly cant keep track of one person? Strange.
  • Trump, plaguebringer.
    • I feel fine laughing at you because I also laughed at the right wingnuts who thought they were Johnny Politico by trying to hang every random bad thing in the world on Obama.

      Shouldn't you be out panic buying bottled water (because teh virus will destroy our water!!!) at Costco?

      • He literally defunded the agencies that would stop this, shutting down several totally, and then did a rally calling it a hoax. I hope your whole family gets infected.
        • He's not calling the virus itself a hoax, he's calling the chicken littling and overblown reaction to it a hoax. And Trump didn't defund shit, you liar. Congress does budgets, not Trump. And I hope you or nobody you know gets infected because I'm not a sociopathic Internet dweeb.
  • The errors and own-goals coming from a once respected agency are what you get when you keep hacking away at budgets and driving standards and the science those standards supported, into the ground. Add to that political interference (all coronavirus statements must be approved by the White House before release) to manipulate the expertise and opinion of the few good scientists left, and you end up with what we now have: An evolving catastrophe. China eventually acknowledged their own-goals and moved decisiv

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