WH COVID coordinator Ashish Jha: None of 17 close contacts with Biden have tested positive

WH COVID coordinator Ashish Jha: None of 17 close contacts with Biden have tested positive

None of the 17 people who had close contact with Joe Biden tested positive for the disease around the time of his COVID diagnosis, White House coronavirus coordinator Ashish Jha said.

“Since late yesterday, again, 17 is the number we’re tracking in the White House medical department — none of them tested positive late yesterday,” Jha told ABC’s This Week program Sunday morning.

“Obviously all those people have been contacted,” he added. ‘They follow’ CDC protocol. And we continue to follow them.’

Vice President Kamala Harris and first lady Jill Biden are among those considered to be close contacts, along with some senior staffers and members of Congress.

Democratic Senators Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren, along with Democratic Representatives Jake Auchincloss and Bill Keating, traveled with Biden on Air Force One Wednesday for the trip to Somerset, Massachusetts.

White House “close contact” protocol requires a person to be within six feet of the person who tested positive for more than 15 minutes. This is the same guideline issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

White House Covid Coordinator Ashish Jha said on Sunday morning that all 17 people determined to be in close contact with President Joe Biden have not tested positive for COVID.  He also said Biden is feeling

White House Covid Coordinator Ashish Jha said on Sunday morning that all 17 people determined to be in close contact with President Joe Biden have not tested positive for COVID. He also said Biden is feeling “much, much better” from Saturday night.

Close contacts include Democratic Senators Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren, along with Democratic Representatives Jake Auchincloss and Bill Keating, who traveled with Biden on Air Force One on Wednesday for the trip to Somerset, Massachusetts.

Close contacts include Democratic Senators Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren, along with Democratic Representatives Jake Auchincloss and Bill Keating, who traveled with Biden on Air Force One on Wednesday for the trip to Somerset, Massachusetts.

Jha noted that COVID-19 protocols were already “tight,” noting that Biden would often meet with people outside.

The president’s doctor said in a Sunday update on his condition that Biden’s symptoms are improving “significantly,” but he still has a sore throat three days after the initial diagnosis of COVID-19.

“His voice stays a little deep,” White House physician Kevin O’Connor noted in his letter to Karine Jean-Pierre, Biden’s press officer.

The sore throat, says Dr. O’Connor, is “probably the result of lymphoid activation as his body clears the virus, so that’s encouraging.”

‘His rhinorrhoea’ [runny nose]coughing and body aches are significantly reduced,” he noted.

White House coronavirus response coordinator Ashish Jha also said on Sunday morning that Biden is feeling “much, much better” after his COVID-19 diagnosis.

“I checked in with his team late last night,” Jha told CBS Face the Nation host Margaret Brennan. “He felt good. Yesterday he had a good day. He has a viral syndrome, so an upper respiratory infection, and he’s doing fine.’

“So we didn’t get any updates this morning, but last night he felt much, much better,” Jha said hours before O’Connor released his update.

Biden received his positive diagnosis during a routine COVID test conducted on Thursday.

Physician of the White House

White House physician Kevin O’Connor sent another update on President Joe Biden’s illness on Sunday following his positive COVID diagnosis. The letter states Biden’s “predominant symptom” is a sore throat and, as a result, a deeper-than-normal voice

dr.  Kevin O'Connor is the Biden White House physician.  He's been sending updates on the president since his COVID diagnosis on Thursday

dr. Kevin O’Connor is the Biden White House physician. He’s been sending updates on the president since his COVID diagnosis on Thursday

When news of his diagnosis came out, the president said he was fine and working from isolation in the White House.

dr. O’Connor said Sunday morning that Biden had completed his third day of PAXLOVID treatment on Saturday night.

Biden, the doctor said, will continue to isolate, as he has the highly contagious BA.5 variant.

Jha said the emergence of the BA.5 variant leads to more need for continuous indoor masking.

“Masks work, right?” he said. “They’re obviously slowing down the transmission. So in high-transmission areas, I think it’s very sensible for people to wear masks indoors, especially if they’re in crowded, poorly ventilated areas.”

The doctor said 80 percent of current COVID infections in the US are this BA. 5 variant.

‘Thank God our vaccines and therapies work well against’ [this variant]That’s why I think the president is doing well,” he said on Sunday.

The president’s physician, Dr. Kevin O’Connor, in a Saturday update on Biden’s condition, wrote that his previous symptoms, including a runny nose and cough, have become “less bothersome.”

His earlier notes after Biden’s diagnosis Thursday did not mention a sore throat or body aches.

President Joe Biden speaks virtually during a meeting with his economics team at the South Court Auditorium at the White House complex in Washington on Friday, July 22, 2022, as he remained isolated after his COVID diagnosis

President Joe Biden speaks virtually during a meeting with his economics team at the South Court Auditorium at the White House complex in Washington on Friday, July 22, 2022, as he remained isolated after his COVID diagnosis

Biden’s vital signs, such as blood pressure and respiratory rate, “remain perfectly normal” and his oxygen saturation levels are “excellent” with “no shortness of breath at all,” the doctor wrote in his latest update.

“His lungs stay clean,” he added.

O’Connor said the preliminary DNA sequencing results that indicated Biden was infected with the BA.5 variant did not affect his treatment plan in any way.

Jha promised on Sunday that the White House would continue to provide updates on the president’s condition and whether he may have long-term symptoms.

“We think it’s very important for the American people to know how well their president is doing,” he said.

“Obviously if he has persistent symptoms, obviously if any of them are getting in the way of his ability to perform his duties, we will disclose that to the American people early and often.” But I suspect this will be a course of COVID that we’ve seen in many Americans who have been fully vaccinated, double boosted, and treated with those tools in hand,” Jha added.

“The president is doing well and we trust he will continue to do so.”

HOW COVID ANTIVIRAL TREATMENTS WORK:

low vrio and Paxlovíd are oral antiviral treatments that work by blocking the ability of the Covid-19 virus to multiply in the body.

The medication must be prescribed by a licensed prescriber, such as a general practitioner or a nurse practitioner.

Oral treatment should be administered as soon as possible after the diagnosis of Covid-19 and within five days of symptoms to achieve the best results.

The capsules are taken twice a day for five days with the most common side effects such as diarrhea, nausea and dizziness.

low vrio was prioritized early this year for use in residential aged care facilities as a priority for the elderly.

That is because Paxlovíd is not safe to use with certain other medications and should not be taken by people with severe kidney or liver disease.

The two active substances in the medicine, nirmatrelvir and ritonavir, which are given as separate tablets, must be taken together twice a day for five days.

Oral treatment is not intended as a substitute for vaccination against Covid-19, with vaccines being considered the best protection against the virus.

Source: Australian Department of Health