UPDATED: Five more N.C. residents test presumptively positive for COVID-19

Illustration created at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of the 2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV).

Five more people in Wake County tested presumptively positive Monday for the coronavirus COVID-19.

The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services says all traveled to Boston in late February to attend a BioGen conference. Several cases of COVID-19 across the country have been tied to the conference. These cases are not related to the Wake County individual who tested positive last week. All are in isolation at their respective homes.

Biogen has asked all employees and contractors at its Research Triangle Park offices to work from home until further notice after an employee from Indiana worked at the office last week while exhibiting symptoms that later turned out to be a coronavirus infection, WRAL reports.

Also on Monday, North Carolina Congressman Mark Meadows of Cashiers, who just last week was tapped to be the new Chief of Staff for President Trump, has entered a self-quarantine along with other prominent Republican lawmakers that interacted with a person with the virus at a conservative conference in Washington at the end of last month.

The Wake County tests, conducted by the North Carolina State Laboratory of Public Health, are presumptively positive and will be confirmed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) lab. While awaiting confirmation of results from the CDC, the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services will treat presumptive cases as positive and follow CDC guidelines to protect public health and limit the spread of infection.

The Wake County Public Health Division is already working to identify close contacts. The CDC defines close contact as being within approximately 6 feet of a person with a COVID-19 infection for a prolonged period of time. Based on information provided by the individual, county health officials will assess risks of exposure, determine which if any additional measures are needed such as temperature and symptom checks, quarantine and/or testing.

Because COVID-19 is most commonly spread through respiratory droplets, North Carolinians should take the same measures that health care providers recommend to prevent the spread of the flu and other viruses, including washing your hands, avoiding touching your face, staying home if you are sick and covering coughs and sneezes with your elbow.

North Carolinians with questions or concerns about COVID-19 can call the COVID-19 phone line toll-free at 866-462-3821. This helpline is staffed by the North Carolina Poison Control 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

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