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CINCINNATI (WKRC) - With two possible cases of coronavirus reported in Butler County, hospitals and area emergency rooms are also on high alert. The team at Bethesda North Hospital tracks and reports several illnesses this time of year, like the flu and other hospital-related infections. Now, they have been alerted -- especially emergency medicine staff -- to ask a few extra questions to those coming into the emergency room with cold or flu-like symptoms. They are not sure yet exactly how the coronavirus spreads, but the thought is through respiratory droplets, which can come from a cough, but they can also come from your hands that might touch an infected surface. They have isolation rooms ready to go in all area hospitals should they need to separate a potentially infected person. The problem might be telling who's infected with this virus and who's got something else going around. "Unfortunately the symptoms with this are relatively generic. It's a fever, low-grade cough, kind of cold-like symptoms. There's nothing really specific about it other than to start thinking about it because we also have people coming in with the flu right now that have fevers and muscle aches and cough and that kind of stuff, so it's really just putting the whole picture together and asking about the travel history or exposure to someone that had that travel history," said Bethesda North's chief medical officer, Dr. David Kirkpatrick. There are traits to coronaviruses that the team says we do know, so that helps with the treatment of symptoms and how to track it, but right now, there's nothing if this gets serious to really stop it in an infected person. The virus is thought to have started from animal to human transmission in China but now does appear to spread from human-to-human contact.