By Thursday afternoon, there were at least 205 cases of the novel coronavirus in the United States — with 70 in Washington state alone — according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as well as state and local governments.
Clinicians should now “use their judgment to determine if a patient has signs and symptoms compatible with … (coronavirus) and whether the patient should be tested,” the CDC said.
Experts have questioned whether the United States can meet the likely surge in testing demand that will follow the change in guidelines.
Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar said Thursday that he believes between CDC tests and those from a private company, IDT, there will be a nationwide capacity to test 475,000 people by the end of the week. Azar said he hopes IDT will ramp up to a million or a million and a half people by the end of next week.
He explained that the test involves testing multiple specimens from one person. For example, in order to test 400,000 people, the IDT test will process 1 million specimens.
Two kinds of coronavirus tests in the United States have FDA emergency use authorizations and are in use nationwide.
One kind is the CDC test kits that are distributed to public health laboratories across the country, and another test has been designed and used by New York state.
The number of cases includes 46 repatriated citizens from the Diamond Princess cruise ship, which docked in Japan last month after an outbreak and quarantine, as well as three Americans repatriated from Wuhan, China, the epicenter of the outbreak.
Another cruise ship is linked to coronavirus
California’s first coronavirus death was reported Wednesday — a former passenger on Princess cruise line’s Grand Princess ship who died almost two weeks after he returned home.
The unidentified man was 71 and had underlying health conditions, Placer County health officials said. He was likely exposed to the virus on his cruise from San Francisco to Mexico between February 11 to 21.
On Thursday morning, the Grand Princess was headed back to the California coast from another voyage to Hawaii. Federal health officials will screen people on aboard, including some who went on the same voyage as the California man who died.
The cruise line said 62 passengers currently on the ship had also traveled on the San Francisco-Mexico trip last month and remained on board for this voyage.
“We have shared essential travel and health data with the CDC to facilitate their standard notification to the state and county health authorities to follow up with individuals who may have been exposed to people who became ill,” Princess Cruises said in a statement.
To screen passengers, the US Coast Guard will deliver kits to the ship Thursday via helicopter, and a medical team aboard will administer the tests. Princess Cruises said Thursday about 100 people on the ship had been identified for testing.
The samples will be sent by helicopter to a lab in Richmond, California, Princess Cruises said.
There are 11 passengers and 10 crew members who’ve developed symptoms Gov. Gavin Newsom said. The ship is carrying 2,500 passengers.
The governor declared a state of emergency, which allows for more money to be allocated for the state’s response.
Passengers on that ship were quarantined in Tokyo Bay.
Washington state is hard-hit
“As more areas see community spread, local communities may start employing tools that encourage social distancing,” Messonnier said.
“The goal of social distancing is to limit exposure by reducing face-to-face contact and preventing spread among people in community settings.”
Schools, festivals affected
At least 57 US schools were closed Thursday due coronavirus fears. Of those 57, 36 are in Washington State, 20 are in New York State, and one is in Rhode Island.
Additional schools that announced closures last week and earlier this week have reopened.
The South by Southwest (SXSW) festival in Austin, Texas, lost one major participant.
A Netflix spokesperson confirmed to CNN that the streaming company is pulling out due to coronavirus concerns. The pullout was first reported in Variety.
SXSW is an annual conference combining technology, music, media, and film scheduled from March 13 to March 22. Austin public health officials said the conference would continue as planned.
In Ohio, Gov. Mike DeWine announced Thursday that while athletic events will continue at the Arnold Sports and Fitness expo in Columbus, general spectators will be prohibited from attending.
CNN’s Holly Yan, Kay Jones, Andy Rose, Cheri Mossburg, Sarah Moon, Kerry Flynn, Kristina Sgueglia and Konstantin Toropin contributed to this report.