Gov. Baker: State is preparing for possible virus outbreak
BOSTON (AP) — Gov. Charlie Baker said Thursday he will release a plan next week on steps Massachusetts is taking to prepare for a possible outbreak of a new virus spreading around the world.
Baker told reporters that since the beginning of the month there have been daily conversations among the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and local health departments about the COVID-19. The Republican said he's also been calls for governors with the CDC and the federal Department of Health and Human Services.
He said the federal government has already taken steps to screen those arriving in the U.S. from affected regions.
“I would expect that by the beginning of next week we’ll probably have a fully formulated plan that we can show people," Baker said. “But again I would point out that here in Massachusetts, based on the data and the information and the guidance that we’ve received so far, this remains a low threat.”
He also said the state has been helping monitor people in self-quarantine in their homes to see if they showed symptoms of the virus. Of the 608 who were under self-quarantine, 377 have already completed their monitoring and have been released without symptoms.
The monitoring typically extends over a 14-day period during. If there are no symptoms after that period, the individual is determined to be in the clear.
There has been a single case of COVID-19 in Massachusetts. The man, who is in his 20s and a student at the University of Massachusetts Boston, had traveled to Wuhan, China, and sought medical care soon after his return.
“That patient is doing well and continues to recover in self-quarantine,” Bharel told reporters. COVID-19 is caused by a member of the coronavirus family...