Health & Fitness
Two More Coronavirus Cases Reported In NYC
A man in his 40s and a woman in her 80s both tested positive for COVID-19, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Thursday morning.
NEW YORK CITY — Two more cases of novel coronavirus have been confirmed in New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Thursday morning.
A man in his 40s and a woman in her 80s, neither of whom traveled to a high-risk nation or reported contact with a known COVID-19 patient, both tested positive for the virus, the Mayor announced on television and Twitter.
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Both patients are hospitalized in intensive care units and the city's disease detectives are tracking down their closest contacts for testing, said the Mayor.
"We are going to see more cases like this as community transmission becomes more common," de Blasio tweeted. "We want New Yorkers to be prepared and vigilant, not alarmed."
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De Blasio called on the Centers for Disease Prevention and Control to send more test kits, which he said the city urgently needs.
"Our single greatest challenge is the lack of fast federal action to increase testing capacity — without that, we cannot beat this epidemic back," he wrote.
The other two cases are the 50-year-old Midtown lawyer hospitalized at New York Presbyterian-Columbia Medical Center and a 39-year-old health care worker who is recovering in isolation in her Manhattan apartment.
The New York state total of COVID-19 cases was 13 as of Thursday morning, and included the New Rochelle lawyer's wife, son and daughter, all of whom worked and studied in New York City.
Yeshiva University and New York Law School both closed their campuses Wednesday after the lawyer's 20-year-old son and another student reported contact with the lawyer.
The Mayor first shared this breaking news on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" but did not release a public statement for another hour.
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