No one from the first group of Americans who were evacuated from Wuhan, China, has tested positive for the novel (new) coronavirus, said health officials in Southern California.
Riverside County Health Officials said that “to date,” none of the 195 evacuees who were being held in medical isolation at the March Air Reserve Base have contracted the virus.
The passengers arrived at the airbase after being flown from Wuhan via a chartered State Department flight. Reports have said that many of the passengers work for the State Department or are relatives of the agency’s employees.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) implemented a 14-day quarantine for the evacuees. The quarantine expires next week.
“People who have not developed symptoms will have successfully completed their quarantine and will be free to leave the base,” Kaiser added.
Kaiser said that some people have exhibited inappropriate behavior amid concerns about the virus, saying they have made “hurtful” comments to staffers at March Airbase “in person and on social media,” the paper reported.
“A few base workers have even been accosted in uniform. This is not acceptable and needs to stop,” said Kaiser.
It comes about two days after the State Department announced that more than 800 Americans and U.S. lawful permanent residents returned to the United States after leaving Wuhan.
Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said all returning citizens and permanent residents will be screened for the virus in an attempt to prevent it from spreading inside the United States.
The CDC has confirmed 12 cases of coronavirus in the United States, including in California, Wisconsin, Massachusetts, Illinois, Arizona, and Washington state.