In a telebriefing on the COVID-19 outbreak, Nancy Messonnier, MD,
director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory
Diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced
that the agency has updated the definition of “Person Under Investigation,” or PUI, for the disease.
The definition has been revised “to meet the needs of this rapidly
evolving situation,” she said. The new PUI definition includes travel to
more geographic areas to reflect this past week’s marked uptick in
coronavirus activity in Italy and Iran. In addition to these countries
and China, recent travel to Japan or South Korea also constitutes an
epidemiologic risk factor which, in conjunction with clinical features,
warrant an individual being classified as a PUI. These five countries
each now have widespread person-to-person transmission of the virus.
Dr. Messonnier left open the possibility that the PUI definition
would continue to evolve if such transmission within communities becomes
more common. Asked whether the small number of U.S. cases thus might be
an artifact of low test volumes, she said, “We aggressively controlled
our borders to slow the spread. This was an intentional U.S. strategy.
The CDC has always had the capacity to test rapidly from the time the
sequence was available. …We have been testing aggressively.”
The original PUI definition, she explained, emphasized individuals
with fever, cough, or trouble breathing who had traveled recently from
areas with COVID-19 activity, in particular China’s Hubei province. “We
have been most focused on symptomatic people who are closely linked to,
or who had, travel history, but our criteria also allow for clinical
discretion,” she said. “There is no substitute for an astute clinician
on the front lines of patient care.”
The first COVID-19 case from person-to-person spread was reported on
Feb. 27. “At this time, we don’t know how or where this person became
infected,” said Dr. Messonnier, although investigations are still
underway. She responded to a question about whether the CDC delayed
allowing COVID-19 testing for the patient for several days, as was
reported in some media accounts.
“According to CDC records, the first call we got was Feb. 23,” when
public health officials in California reported a severely ill person
with no travel abroad and no known contacts with individuals that would
trigger suspicions for coronavirus. The CDC recommended COVID-19 testing
on that day, she said.
Dr. Messonnier declined to answer questions about a whistleblower
report alleging improper training and inadequate protective measures for
Department of Health & Human Services workers at the quarantine
center at Travis Air Force Base, Calif.
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