RALEIGH (AP) — A resident of Onslow County who recently traveled to Texas has North Carolina's first confirmed case of swine flu, Gov. Bev Perdue said Sunday.
Perdue told reporters at the Department of Health and Human Services that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the case.
"Let me reassure all of you that North Carolina is as prepared, and some of us believe more prepared, than any state in the country," Perdue said. "We have had an emergency center up and running for more than a week in case this day came, and here it is."
Perdue said everyone who has been in contact with the patient is following CDC isolation guidelines, as is the patient. No secondary cases have been reported so far.
The governor stressed to the state's residents and visitors that they should take the necessary precautions, such as washing their hands thoroughly, covering their mouths when they sneeze or cough, and staying at home if they feel sick.
State health director Dr. Jeffrey Engel would neither identify nor give details about the patient, except to say a couple who had traveled to San Antonio contracted the disease. Engel said he didn't know when they had been there, but he did say that they had been there for about five days when they picked up the flu.
Engel said the couple has been ordered into isolation for seven days after the initial manifestation of symptoms, and the spouse is a probable case awaiting CDC confirmation, possibly on Monday. Neither has been to the hospital, he said.
"None of their contacts has become ill," Engel said.
So far, the state lab has handled 413 samples and had 320 come back negative; 65 are still outstanding, Engel said. Six cases are probable, and one test involving a traveler from Wake County is being rerun because the results were inconclusive, he said.
Engel also pointed to four probable cases in Craven County; those cases are in a cluster, and the people are in isolation.
The tally released Sunday by the CDC shows that 30 states now have cases of swine flu. That's up from the CDC's count of 160 confirmed cases in 21 states.
Fact sheet on the H1N1 Flu: At CDC.gov
As of 4 p.m. Monday:
In Guilford County, three suspect cases submitted to the state lab last week came back negative, according to the county health department. And six cases in Alamance County also were negative, health department officials there said.
Guilford, Alamance and Randolph have no new cases under the new reporting guidelines, which changed when the state confirmed its first case over the weekend. Rockingham County officials could not be reached late Monday afternoon.
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