The Mercury News

Daniel Laske was a ‘Social Justice Warrior’

- By Katharine Q. Seelye

NEW YORK >> At 21, Daniel Laske was on the cusp of a career, one in which he planned to combine his devotion to medicine with his love of politics. He wasn’t quite certain what that would look like. But he was studying political science at Hunter College in Manhattan and working as a medical assistant at a CityMD urgent care center in the Bronx, all with the goal of making the world a better place.

Laske tested positive for COVID-19 in February, his father, Darius Laske, said in a phone interview. It was surprising because Daniel Laske, who had a condition that made him prone to infections, had been hypercauti­ous about the coronaviru­s, so much so that he always had worn two masks. After falling ill, he told his family that he had only a slight fever and muscle fatigue. Not to worry, he said.

Daniel Laske died the next day, on Feb. 26, at his mother’s apartment in the Bronx. Though the medical examiner did not determine the official cause of death for some time, he told the family, “COVID definitely had something to do with it,” Darius Laske said.

Daniel Jason Laske was born Jan. 8, 2000, in the Bronx with a disorder called congenital neutropeni­a, which meant he had low levels of the type of white blood cells needed to fight infections. Doctors gave him less than a year to live.

Daniel Laske defied their expectatio­ns every year. He learned to give himself regular injections of a drug that stimulates the growth of white blood cells, and since the age of 16, he had not been sick.

In addition to his parents, Daniel Laske is survived by four sisters, Carla, Hadyn, Leslie and Madison Laske, and his stepmother, Fanny Laske.

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