FOPH informed that the man
was in Italy on February 15 to attend an event near Milan, and that the first
symptoms appeared two days later.
Switzerland has recorded
its first coronavirus case as the country’s Federal Office of Public Health
(FOPH) confirmed on Tuesday a case in the southern part of the country
bordering Italy.
The victim is said to be a
man in his 70s from Ticino canton bordering Italy.
His infection was said to
have been confirmed by a lab test in Geneva.
The patient, having
remained with his family ever since, is now in isolation at a clinic in Lugano,
Ticino canton.
FOPH said that cantonal and
federal authorities will identify other people who may have been in contact
with the patient in order to quarantine and monitor them for the next 14 days.
According to FOPH, this
first COVID-19 case in Switzerland does not change the risk assessment —
COVID-19 currently represents only a moderate risk for the Swiss population.
Medical establishments in
the country are ready to carry out early detection and diagnostic examination
of suspected cases as well as to care for other sick people.
Xinhua quoted the Swiss
Interior Ministry as saying around 300 suspected COVID-19 cases have so far
been tested in Switzerland, without any confirmed cases until now.
FOPH officials said there
were currently 70 suspected cases being tested in Switzerland, including
several in the cantons of Bern and Basel, but only a small number in Ticino
canton. Test results will be known in the coming hours.
The Swiss authorities
announced Monday that they were beefing up measures to prevent spread of the
virus from neighbouring Italy, and that the situation in Switzerland was under
control.
The office also informed that
Swiss Federal Councillor Alain Berset met in Rome with the health ministers of
Italy, France, Germany, Austria, Croatia and Slovenia on Tuesday to strengthen
cross-border collaboration to combat the spread of the deadly disease.
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