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Friday,
October 19, 2001
More
anthrax cases confirmed
CBS employee, N.J. postal worker bring total of infected people
to six
By David Espo
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
A CBS employee who opens Dan Rathers mail and
a postal worker in New Jersey were added Thursday to the troubling
roster of Americans infected with anthrax. As many as three
more people reported telltale skin lesions that may signify
additional cases.
Our
labs are working around the clock to try and get clarity,
said Dr. Julie Gerberding of the Atlanta-based Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
The
disclosures brought the number of confirmed cases of anthrax
nationwide to six since Oct. 4 and complicated the Bush administrations
effort to reassure an anxious nation it was working aggressively
to combat bioterrorism and other threats.
Our
antennae are up for all conceivable risks, said Tom
Ridge, appointed the nations
first director of homeland security in the wake of Sept. 11
terrorist attacks that killed thousands in New York and Washington.
Standing
by Ridges side at a news conference, Surgeon General
David Satcher said stockpiles of antibiotics are sufficient
to respond to the anthrax threat, and FBI Director Robert
Mueller announced a $1 million reward for information leading
to the arrest
and conviction of the culprits behind a spate of anthrax-tainted
mail.
Even
apart from the new cases of anthrax, there was ample evidence
of inconvenience, dislocation and perhaps worse as the government
struggled against a lethal spore so tiny it is invisible to
the human eye.
Congressional
activity was largely shut down, the House officially, the
Senate in session but its sprawling complex of three office
buildings closed. Officials said they had received laboratory
results for hundreds of people, but no additional reports
of positive tests for anthrax exposure beyond the 31 disclosed
on Wednesday. All were linked to a letter opened earlier in
the week in the office of Majority Leader Tom Daschle.
At
this time, there is no evidence of contamination in the ventilation
system of the building that houses his office, said
Daschle, D-S.D.
We
know weve got a hot zone in the Hart Building, probably
in the Dirksen Building, said House Democratic leader
Dick Gephardt. The remaining question is, are there
hot zones in other areas of other buildings?
In
Vermont, officials recommended a 60-day course of antibiotics
for 60 people aboard a Northwest Airlines flight that landed
in Burlington on Monday night. Dr. Jan Carney, state health
commissioner, said preliminary tests of a powdery substance
found on the plane showed no evidence of spores, but
further tests have shown growth of a bacillus or rod-shaped
bacteria of the same genus as the bacteria that causes anthrax.
In
a conference call with reporters, the CDCs Gerberding
said, We do have other individuals who are reporting
skin lesions or exposure circumstances that are under active
investigation. As many as four people fall into that
category, she said. One of them, the postal worker in New
Jersey, was later confirmed to be infected.
She
said the four are in large part linked to the
outbreak in New York and to another in Florida where one man
died and another is hospitalized with a more serious inhalation
form of the disease.
Ridge
labored to minimize the news that two more anthrax cases had
been confirmed.
Thousands
and thousands and thousands of people have been tested ...
yet only five people have tested positive at this time,
he said, adding that officials were in the process of confirming
the sixth.
CBS
announced at midmorning that it had become the latest major
television network to be touched by anthrax.
Network
officials said a woman who works for Rather had been diagnosed
with a skin form of the disease. Shes doing fine.
She feels great, said network news president Andrew
Heyward. Her prognosis is excellent.
The
woman, whose name was not released, discovered a blemish on
her cheek earlier this month, before anthrax was on
anybodys mind, Rather told a news conference.
He said initial blood and nasal swab tests came back negative,
but a biopsy test came back positive. He said she had no memory
of opening suspicious-looking mail.
The
development followed the delivery of an anthrax-laced letter
to Tom Brokaw, a case in which an office worker contracted
a skin form of the disease.
Officials
reported earlier in the week that the 7-month-old son of an
ABC producer had contracted skin anthrax, but they have provided
no explanation of the source.
In
New Jersey, Postal Inspector Tony Esposito said a female letter
carrier at a West Trenton post office had tested positive
for anthrax, and a maintenance employee at the main Trenton
mail facility was awaiting test results. Acting Gov. Donald
DiFrancesco said both were doing well and taking antibiotics.
The
anthrax-spiked letters mailed to Daschle and Brokaw both were
postmarked at the mail facility.
Ridge,
flanked by other senior officials, presided over an hour-long
news conference at which the administration unveiled several
initiatives to ease public concern.
Apart
from the $1 million reward and reassurances about antibiotics,
Postmaster General John Potter said postcards would be sent
to every mailing address in the nation with instructions on
the handling of suspicious mail.
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