Filipinos repatriated from virus epicenter show no symptoms of nCoV

This handout photo from Department of Foreign Affairs shows Filipino workers repatriated from central Chinese city of Wuhan inside a plane.
Department of Foreign Affairs, Handout

MANILA, Philippines — All Filipinos repatriated from the ground zero of the deadly novel coronavirus were “healthy,” the Department of Health said Monday, following safety concerns on the facility used as quarantine zone.

DOH Undersecretary Eric Domingo said none of the 32 Filipinos flown home from China’s Hubei province exhibited symptoms of 2019-

nCoV since their arrival in the Philippines Sunday morning.

“‘Yung

lahat

ng

pumunta

sa airport

wala

silang

tinurn away na

kahit

isang Filipino

dahil

lahat

ng

dumating ay

malusog,

walang

lagnat,

” Domingo said in an interview on radio

dzMM Monday. 

(

No Filipino was turned away in [Wuhan] airport because all repatriates were healthy, they have no fever.)

He added: “During the flight na

tatlong oras,

chini-check sila

walang na-develop na

kahit

anong symptoms

hanggang

makab

aba sila

dito

sa Clark.”

(

They were checked during the three-hour flight. No one developed any symptoms until they arrived at Clark International Airport.)

The repatriates were transferred to the Athlete’s Village in New Clark City in Capas, Tarlac for a mandatory 14-day quarantine.

“In the past 24 hours,

wala

pa pong

nire-report

sa

atin na

nagkaroon

ng

sakit,” Domingo said.

The Health official said

medical personnel will be deployed to allay the fears of communities surrounding New Clark City.

Capas Mayor Reynaldo Catacutan earlier lamented that the DOH did not involve the local government in its decision to use New Clark City as a quarantine zone for evacuees.

DOH and the Bases Conversion and Development Authority, which has jurisdiction over NCC, stressed that necessary measures

were put in place to ensure the adjacent communities of NCC

are kept safe.

The death toll from the novel coronavirus reached 900 in mainland China, overtaking global fatalities in the 2002-2003 SARS epidemic.

The Philippines confirmed three cases, including one death—the first fatality outside mainland China. 

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