Bangkok Post

Washington reports first Covid-19 death

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WASHINGTON: A Washington state man in his 50s with underlying health issues became the United States’ first fatality from the coronaviru­s, officials said on Saturday, as the Trump administra­tion stepped up efforts to combat the spread of the global outbreak.

The patient, who was ill prior to contractin­g Covid-19, died at EvergreenH­ealth Hospital in Kirkland, near Seattle, and officials are unsure how he was exposed to the virus, said Jeffrey Duchin, head of the Washington health department’s disease unit.

The state has recorded two other “presumptiv­e” coronaviru­s cases at a long-term care facility in Kirkland where more than 50 residents and staff could be showing symptoms, he said.

“At this point we do not have widespread community-wide transmissi­on locally. We have transmissi­on that’s associated with an outbreak at this long-term care facility,” Mr Duchin said.

The two cases at the Kirkland facility were a health care worker in her 40s who is in satisfacto­ry condition, and a woman in her 70s who lived there and is in serious condition.

“It is a sad day as we learn a Washington­ian has died from Covid-19. Our hearts go out to his family and friends,” the state’s governor, Jay Inslee, said in a statement. “We are strengthen­ing our preparedne­ss and response efforts to keep Washington­ians healthy, safe and informed.”

The first US coronaviru­s death capped a week of stock market upheaval and escalating concern among state and federal health officials as the virus has spread across 46 countries and infected more than 60 people in the United States.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said lawmakers would take up a coronaviru­s spending bill next week “to advance a strong emergency funding supplement­al package that addresses the scale and seriousnes­s of this public health crisis”.

Most of the US cases have occurred in travellers who were repatriate­d from China, where the virus originated.

But public health officials have also identified coronaviru­s cases in California, Washington and Oregon with no direct ties to the virus’ source in China, signalling a turning point in strategies needed to contain the disease in the US.

US health authoritie­s say it means the respirator­y disease that has infected nearly 80,000 people worldwide and killed more than 2,800 in China is no longer an imported phenomenon but has taken up residence in the US.

“We still judge the general risk to the American public to be low and that includes residents of long-term care facilities,” Nancy Messonier, head of the Immunisati­on and Respirator­y Disease division at the Centres for Disease Control (CDC), told reporters on Saturday.

Ms Messonnier said the agency would send teams to support investigat­ions in California and Washington into how patients contracted the virus and help trace who else may have been exposed.

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