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‘Imported’ COVID-19 cases becoming more common upstate

An apoptotic cell (tan) heavily infected with novel coronavirus particles (orange), isolated from a patient sample and viewed through a scanning electron micrograph.
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
An apoptotic cell (tan) heavily infected with novel coronavirus particles (orange), isolated from a patient sample and viewed through a scanning electron micrograph.

Many of the COVID-19 cases diagnosed in Monroe County recently are imported. As WXXI’s Brett Dahlberg reports, the county public health department says contact tracing is finding that travelers are arriving in Monroe County carrying the novel coronavirus.

About a quarter of the COVID-19 cases diagnosed in Monroe County recently are imported, according to the county public health department.Local epidemiologists said that’s much higher than the proportion a couple of months ago, when community spread was responsible for the vast majority of known cases in the county.

An apoptotic cell (tan) heavily infected with novel coronavirus particles (orange), isolated from a patient sample and viewed through a scanning electron micrograph.
Credit National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
/
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
An apoptotic cell (tan) heavily infected with novel coronavirus particles (orange), isolated from a patient sample and viewed through a scanning electron micrograph.

The shift isn’t limited to Monroe County. In Erie County, whereDr. John Sellickspecializes in infection control at the University at Buffalo, the local health department said contact tracers there are also seeing a common history of travel in their new COVID-19 cases.Sellick saidasymptomatic and presymptomatic transmissionof the novel coronavirus is leading people who feel well to unwittingly carry the virus into New York.

“The problem is we don’t know if you have infection,” Sellick said. “Everybody’s saying, ‘I’m not infected.’ You might be infected. We don’t know that.”

Sellick and local public health departments said the state’s quarantine requirement for travelers from states with high rates of infection can prevent people from seeding new clusters of COVID-19 in New York.

“There’s just an absurd number of cases in Florida, Texas, Arizona, and a number of other states,” said Sellick.

A travel advisory from the state of New York requires people arriving from several states with growing COVID-19 case counts to quarantine after arriving in New York.
Credit New York State Department of Health
/
New York State Department of Health
A travel advisory from the state of New York requires people arriving from several states with growing COVID-19 case counts to quarantine after arriving in New York.

The Monroe County public health department said about half of the coronavirus cases it’s identified that have ties to travel are in people who have traveled to Florida.Florida is one of 22 states from which New York nowrequires travelers to quarantinefor 14 days after arrival.

Epidemiologists said New York has slowed virus transmission considerably, but it’s in a precarious position as one of only a few places in the country where the virus is under control.

“We are at risk for having a resurgence,” said Dr. Emil Lesho, the hospital epidemiologist at Rochester Regional Health. “We should not let our guard down.”

Sellick, like many public health experts, said efforts at containment should focus oneducation over enforcement.

New York requires travelers from the 22 states on its quarantine list to fill out forms providing contact and lodging information if they arrive at transit hubs, but that hardly seals the state’s borders.

“You can come into New York on the back roads, and no one’s going to know,” Sellick said. “So we’re looking to educate people on what the risks are so they do the right thing for the community.”

Copyright 2020 WXXI News

Brett is the health reporter and a producer at WXXI News. He has a master’s degree from the City University of New York Graduate School of Journalism and before landing at WXXI, he was an intern at WNYC and with Ian Urbina of the New York Times. He also produced freelance reporting work focused on health and science in New York City. Brett grew up in Bremerton, Washington, and holds a bachelor’s degree from Willamette University in Salem, Oregon.
Brett Dahlberg