02/29/2020 / By Mike Adams
The Epoch Times is among the very best independent news publishers right now in terms of covering the coronavirus pandemic honestly. In fact, right now there are basically five main sites I can think of that are providing rapid, accurate coverage that blows away the lies of the mainstream media, the Mike Pence propaganda brigade of the Trump administration and the criminally negligent cover-ups at the WHO and CDC:
TheEpochTimes.com
NaturalNews.com / Pandemic.news
InfoWars.com
ZeroHedge.com
PeakProsperity.com
Almost every conservative, pro-Trump publisher has now descended into the “it’s no worse than the flu” denialism, and the CIA-run left-wing media is now just focused entirely on trying to crash the markets to destroy Trump’s “everything is awesome” narrative. (For the record, I publicly warned that Trump tying his presidency to the stock market was an incredibly foolish idea. Now we’re seeing why…)
So here’s a bombshell story from The Epoch Times, and I strongly urge you to financially support The Epoch Times by buying a subscription to their publication. They are anti-communist, pro-America, pro-liberty, pro human rights and are willing to tell the truth about what’s happening with this pandemic. What I share with The Epoch Times is that we both have family members who fled the Chinese communists, so I fully support The Epoch Times and their reporting.
Here’s their story, and you can read the full story at this link:
New coronavirus cases confirmed in the Pacific Northwest suggest the new virus may be spreading in the community in the United States, officials said.
Washington state, Oregon, and California officials confirmed in total four new cases on Friday. Officials do not know where or how three of the patients became infected, making them “possible” instances of community spread, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Community spread means that people acquire COVID-19, the disease caused by the new virus, through an unknown exposure in the community.
The first case of unknown origin was confirmed on Feb. 26 in northern California. Three more were reported on Feb. 28.
“There was no known travel exposure for this individual. So, this is a case of community spread of the disease, much like the case from California earlier this week,” Pat Allen, director of the Oregon Health Authority, told reporters on Friday.
“This new case indicates that there is evidence of community transmission but the extent is still not clear,” Dr. Sara Cody, health officer for Santa Clara County, California, said in a statement.
Health officials in the county reported that an older woman with chronic health conditions was tested after going to the hospital with a respiratory illness. The patient “does not have a travel history nor any known contact with a traveler or infected person,” according to county officials.
“I understand this may be concerning to hear, but this is what we have been preparing for. Now we need to start taking additional actions to slow down the spread of the disease,” Cody said.
Authorities in Oregon reported the state’s first case of COVID-19. The adult patient has no travel history to a country where the virus was circulating nor did they come into close contact with another confirmed case, state officials said.
“As such, public health officials are considering it a likely community-transmitted case, meaning that the origin of the infection is unknown,” the Oregon Health Authority said in a statement.
The patient spent time in the Lake Oswego school district and patients and staff members there may have been exposed to the virus, according to the authority. Officials will try to locate the people the patient came into contact with.
Washington state health authorities said two people—a woman in her 50s and a teenage boy—tested positive for the new disease. The woman traveled recently to Daegu, South Korea, which saw an explosion of cases in recent days, but the teen has no travel history and officials don’t know the source of his infection.
The teen visited Seattle Children’s North Clinic on Feb. 24 and attends Jackson High School in Mill Creek. The Everett Public Schools superintendent decided to close the school on Monday to allow three days of “deep cleaning,” the Washington State Department of Health said.
Officials expect to find more cases of community transmission, Dr. Chris Spitters, interim health officer for the Snohomish Health District, said at a press conference on Friday night.
The four new cases were confirmed by the states using tests developed by the CDC. States received the testing kits early this month but most couldn’t use them until Friday.
The positive cases are considered presumptive pending confirmatory testing by the CDC, which is required through an Emergency Use Authorization. But the CDC and state and local public health officials are treating the cases as if they were confirmed.
Local officials attributed the detection of the cases to the new tests, which cut days off the testing process. States and local labs that couldn’t test locally previously had to spend hours packaging samples before shipping them to the CDC’s Atlanta headquarters. The Oregon State Public Health Laboratory used the new testing kit just hours after validating it, Oregon officials said.
Authorities also said they expect additional cases, a message that has been repeated by both state and federal officials.
“Given the extent of global spread, we expect to identify more individuals with COVID-19 in Washington,” Washington Health Officer Dr. Kathy Lofy said at a press conference.
Federal officials warned earlier in the week that community spread of the new virus was likely, citing the spike in cases in South Korea, Italy, and Iran.
“It’s not so much a question of if this will happen anymore but rather more a question of exactly when this will happen and how many people in this country will have severe illness,” Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, told reporters in a phone call on Wednesday.
Federal officials are using an in-depth report produced by its researchers in 2017 as a roadmap for how to deal with the virus. Without a vaccine or proven treatment, officials are focusing on nonpharmaceutical interventions, which fall into three categories: personal, community, and environmental.
Personal interventions include routine recommendations such as washing hands and staying home when sick, and measures specific to pandemics such as people voluntarily isolating themselves at home even if they’re not sick if a member of their household has become ill.
Community interventions can include closing schools and transitioning to internet-based teleschooling and changing business meetings from in-person to online as well. Some locales could postpone or cancel large gatherings.
Environmental interventions primarily revolve around cleaning surfaces. The school closing for cleaning is an example of an environmental intervention.
Read more at TheEpochTimes.com
And stay informed by reading the news each day at Pandemic.news
Here’s my recent interview with Prof. Francis Boyle:
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