The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Second virus death in U.S. reported

- By Carla K. Johnson and Gillian Flaccus

SEATTLE » Health officials in Washington state said Sunday night that a second person had died from the coronaviru­s — a man in his 70s from a nursing facility near Seattle where dozens of people were sick and had been tested for the virus.

Researcher­s said earlier the virus may have been circulatin­g for weeks undetected in Washington state.

In a statement, Public Health— Seattle & King County said the man died Saturday. On Friday, health officials said a man in his 50s died of coronaviru­s. Both had underlying health conditions, and both were being treated at a hospital in Kirkland, Washington, east of Seattle.

Washington state now has 12 confirmed cases.

State and local authoritie­s stepped up testing for the illness as the number of new cases grew nationwide, with new infections announced in California, Illinois, Rhode Island, New York and Washington state.

Authoritie­s in the Seattle area reported four new cases Sunday night, including the man who died. Two health care workers in California were also diagnosed. Of the new Washington state cases, two were women, one in her 80s and another in her 90s. Both were in critical condition. A man in his 70s was also in critical condition. All three were from the LifeCare nursing facility in Kirkland, Washington, where health officials said 50 people are sick and being tested for the virus.

On Sunday night, the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Fire Fighters said 25 members who responded to calls for help at the nursing facility are being quarantine­d.

The first U.S. case was a Washington

state man who had visited China, where the virus first emerged, but several recent cases in the U.S. have had no known connection to travelers.

In California, two health care workers in the San Francisco Bay area who cared for an earlier coronaviru­s patient were diagnosed with the virus on Sunday, the Alameda and Solano counties said in a joint statement.

The health care workers are both employed at NorthBay VacaValley Hospital in Vacaville, California, and had exposure to a patient treated there before being transferre­d to UC Davis Medical Center in Sacramento, the statement said. That patient was the first person in the U.S. discovered to have contracted the coronaviru­s with no known overseas travel.

Alameda County declared a state of emergency on Sunday following the news.

In Oregon, the state Health Authority

said Sunday that a second person in the state tested positive for the virus. The person is an adult in household contact with the first Oregonian to test positive and does not need medical attention, the authority said.

Elsewhere, authoritie­s announced Sunday a third case in Illinois and Rhode Island and New York’s first cases as worried Americans swarmed stores to stock up on basic goods such as bottled water, canned foods and toilet paper.

The hospitaliz­ed patient in Rhode Island is a man in his 40s who had traveled to Italy in February. New York confirmed Sunday that a woman in her late 30s contracted the virus while traveling in Iran. The patient is not in serious condition. She has respirator­y symptoms and has been in a controlled situation since arriving in New York, according to a statement from the governor’s office.

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 ?? TED S. WARREN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A young fan makes use of a hand-sanitizing station March 1at CenturyLin­k Field prior to an MLS soccer match between the Seattle Sounders and the Chicago Fire in Seattle.
TED S. WARREN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A young fan makes use of a hand-sanitizing station March 1at CenturyLin­k Field prior to an MLS soccer match between the Seattle Sounders and the Chicago Fire in Seattle.

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