Mike Pence: There 'Will Be More' Coronavirus Cases, Possible Deaths

Vice President Mike Pence, addressing coronavirus concerns in the U.S. on Sunday morning talk shows, said the risk of Americans contracting COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, “remains low” though future deaths are “possible.”

“There will be more cases. There’s no question,” he said in an interview on NBC’s “Meet The Press,” during which he also accused Democrats of overhyping and politicizing the virus.

Pence, who was tapped by President Donald Trump last week to oversee the administration’s response to the outbreak, stressed that despite the recent death of a Washington man, “the vast majority” of cases will recover. Individuals facing the greatest risk of death from COVID-19 are those with other health concerns.

Vice President Mike Pence said Sunday that additional cases of COVID-19 in the U.S. are expected though the risk of death from it is low. (NBC Meet The Press)
Vice President Mike Pence said Sunday that additional cases of COVID-19 in the U.S. are expected though the risk of death from it is low. (NBC Meet The Press)

“For people that have other conditions that would militate toward a worse outcome ... we could have more. We could have more sad news,” he said in a separate interview with CNN’s State of the Union. “But the American people should know the risk for the average American remains low.”

There have been 22 confirmed and presumptive positive cases of the virus in the U.S. since late January, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. This figure does not include the 44 cases involving people who were recently repatriated to the U.S. from Asia.

NBC’s Chuck Todd summarized the rate of death in the U.S. as “not reassuring.”

Related: US Increases Travel Restrictions, First Coronavirus Death

“It’s reassuring that so few have gotten it. It’s scary that in the very few cases we’ve had, we already have a death,” he told the vice president.

Pence responded by crediting Trump, saying it could have been worse if the president had not taken swift action, including suspending travel from China to the U.S.

The latest travel restrictions in the U.S. include any foreign national who has visited Iran within the last two weeks and a heightened travel advisory for specific regions of Italy and South Korea.

When asked about companies canceling overseas...

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