Harvey vic dies from bacteria
HARVEY HAS been gone for a month, but he isn’t done claiming victims.
A 77-year-old woman died from a flesh-eating bacterial infection she contracted after falling into floodwaters that the hurricane brought to her Texas home.
Nancy Reed died Sept. 15, the second person to succumb to contaminated storm water from Harvey. Clevelon Brown of Galveston County had picked up a bacterial infection from standing in floodwater and died of sepsis.
J.R. Atkins, a former firefighter who worked to help Harvey victims, was contaminated by an insect bite but survived, according to the Houston Chronicle.
Reed (photo inset) died after falling at her son’s Kingwood home. When she fell, she broke and cut her arm, a family friend told the Chronicle.
She was taken to a hospital, where she died. The flesh-eating disease is also called necrotizing fasciitis.
The disease spreads quickly through muscle tissue and typically affect people with weak immune systems, the Harris County public health office said.
“It’s tragic,” Dr. David Persse, director of Houston emergency medical services, told the Chronicle. “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.”
Reed was very active in the Kingwood community, friends told KHOU, especially with the nonprofit Village Learning and Achievement Center.
“God has gained an amazing angel,” administrative specialist Tina Tilea told KHOU. “That’s what I would say, and we’re going to miss her.”
Reed was born in Pittsburgh in 1940, according to her obituary. A funeral service was held last week.