DALLAS – While the Director of Dallas County Health and Human Services, Philip Huang MD, MPH, said last week “the risk is low” of Dallas having any coronavirus cases, Dallas Fort Worth International Airport is one of 20 airports in the nation that will begin screening passengers on incoming flights from China.
The screening is in order to detect symptoms of the 2019 novel coronavirus, which there have now been 11 cases confirmed in the United States as of earlier this week.
In the Dallas area, the idea is to be proactive while the numbers are still low. “It is a low risk to our community, we are working with partners to assess,” Huang said.
The 20 airports across the United States that will conduct screenings were determined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. US Vice President Mike Pence said earlier this week, these airports were selected since they handle roughly 90% of the passengers coming from China into the United States.
DFW is listed as number seven with the top five airports on the list already screening:
Los Angeles International
San Francisco International
Chicago O’Hare
New York JFK
Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International
Houston George Bush
Intercontinental
Dallas-Fort Worth International
San Diego International
Seattle-Tacoma International
Honolulu International
Anchorage Ted Stevens International
Minneapolis-St. Paul International
Detroit Metropolitan
Miami International
Washington Dulles International
Philadelphia International
Newark Liberty International
Boston Logan International
El Paso International
Puerto Rico’s San Juan Airport
American Airlines was the only airline at DFW Airport with flights to and from China, including Hong Kong, Beijing and Shanghai. Those flights have been temporarily canceled until Mar. 27.
American Airlines said in a statement Friday, “We will continue to evaluate the schedule for Mar. 28 and beyond and make any adjustments as necessary.”
Delta Airlines will suspend flights from Feb. 6 to Apr. 30, and United Airlines will also suspend flights to China beginning Feb. 6.
On Thursday, the U.S. State Department issued its highest travel advisory, urging people to avoid travel to China.
The World Health Organization declared the outbreak a global emergency. It has also been reported that the death toll in China now exceeds that of the SARS outbreak from 2002 and 2003.
A press release from Jane M. Orient, M.D., Tucson, AZ, president, Physicians for Civil Defense stated, “The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus (2019-nCoV) has reached 20,209, with 426 deaths,” that according to the interactive map provided by Johns Hopkins CSSE (Center for Systems Science and Engineering).
Another city has also been quarantined this week, Wenzhou, which is nearly 600 miles from Wuhan.
Orient also said, “The first wave of cases must have occurred in December or earlier because by Jan 2, 41 cases admitted to hospital in Wuhan had a laboratory-confirmed diagnosis of 2010-nCoV. But Wuhan was not placed under quarantine until 5 million people had left to celebrate the New Year, carrying the virus all across China.”
- Log in or Subscribe to post comments.