Volume 10, Number 2—February 2004
THEME ISSUE
2004 SARS Edition
SARS Transmission
Lack of SARS Transmission and U.S. SARS Case-Patient
Figure 3

Figure 3. Duration of exposure for close contacts within 3 feet on the three dates when the case-patient with severe acute respiratory syndrome sought medical care. Four contacts (three household contacts and one healthcare worker) had contact with the patient on 2 of these days. Two healthcare workers had both protected and unprotected contact (shown with hatching).
1Members of the Pennsylvania SARS Investigation Team: Marc-Alain Widdowson, Nino Khetsuriani, L. Clifford McDonald, Stephan S. Monroe, Suxiang Tong, James A. Comer, Daniel Jernigan, Matthew J. Kuehnert, Joseph S. Bresee, Sara A. Lowther, and Larry J. Anderson (CDC); Mary Theresa Temarantz, John P. Bart, William S. Miller, Mary Jo Lampart, and Carol Yozviak (Pennsylvania Department of Health); Shana Stites, (Bethlehem Bureau of Health); Susan Oliver, Debra Wilson, Carol Guanowsky, and Beverly Wasko (Lehigh Valley Hospital); Corwin A. Roberston (CDC and New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services); and Diane Krolikowski, Jeff Bomboy, and Reynaldo C. Guerra.