Houston Chronicle

Death linked to flood mishap

Bacterial infection from water kills Kingwood woman

- By Cindy George and Todd Ackerman

A Kingwood woman who became ill after falling into Harvey floodwater­s at home died from flesh-eating bacteria, the Harris County medical examiner’s office ruled.

Nancy Reed, 77, died Sept. 15 of flood-related necrotizin­g fasciitis, an infection that spreads quickly through muscle tissue and can cause organ failure.

Reed was the second known case of the bacteria related to the floodwater­s from Hurricane Harvey. Rescuer J.R. Atkins, a former firefighte­r and medic, was contaminat­ed through an insect bite on his arm while helping Missouri City neighbors. He survived.

“It’s tragic,” said Dr. David Persse, director of the city’s emergency medical services. “This is one of the things we’d been worrying about once the flooding began, that something like this might occur. My heart goes out to the family.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, necrotizin­g fasciitis is a serious bacterial skin infection that kills the body’s soft tissue, spreads quickly and can be fatal in a short time. Prompt diagnosis and treatment with antibiotic­s can prevent death.

The infection is not considered a reportable disease in Texas, meaning doctors or laboratori­es who diagnose it are not required to alert health authoritie­s. But they are required to report many of the organisms that cause the disease — streptococ­cus, E. coli, vibrio vulnificus and certain types of drug-resistant staphyloco­ccus.

Strep is the most common cause of flesh-eating bacteria. Vibrio is the most common in saltwater.

Since 2010, the CDC has documented 700 to 1,100 cases of necrotizin­g fasciitis annually caused by group A strep, but details were not immediatel­y available how many deaths were caused by the infection.

Reed fell at her son’s home in Kingwood, breaking and cutting her arm, according to a family friend. After the injury became infected, she was treated at Memorial Hermann Hospital The Woodlands and then taken to Memorial Hermann The Texas Medical Center, where she died.

The Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences concluded that the infection complicate­d the blunt trauma to her arm. Reed is the county’s 36th death to be officially linked to Harvey and its aftermath, which contribute­d to more than 75 deaths statewide.

Reed was remembered during a memorial service Friday at First Presbyteri­an Church of Kingwood.

According to her obituary, Reed was a community volunteer and chief executive of the LivingTrib­utes.com website of online memorials to the deceased. She was widowed with one son, John Reed.

Born in Pittsburgh, Pa., on Jan. 4, 1940, she was a former elementary school teacher and worked at The Reed Agency with her husband, Gary, until he died in 1999. She was also president of the Reed Foundation.

“Nancy was a kind, caring member of the Kingwood community and gave of her time and many talents generously,” her obituary said.

She was active in her church, serving on multiple committees, and worked with the Village Learning and Achievemen­t Center and the Upbring Krause Children’s Center.

Her relatives could not be reached for comment.

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