Call & Times

Washington state sees first virus death in US

- By ANDREW SELSKY

The governor of Washington declared a state of emergency Saturday after a man died there of COVID-19, the first such reported death in the United States. More than 50 people in a nursing facility are sick and being tested for the virus.

Gov. Jay Inslee directed state agencies to use “all resources necessary” to prepare for and

respond to the coronaviru­s outbreak. The declaratio­n also allows the use of the Washington National Guard, if necessary.

“We will continue to work toward a day where no one dies from this virus,” the governor vowed.

Health officials in California, Oregon and Washington state are worried about the novel coronaviru­s spreading through West Coast communitie­s because a growing number of people are being infected despite not having visited an area where there was an outbreak, nor apparently been in contact with anyone who had.

The man who died was in his 50s, had underlying health conditions and no history of travel or contact with a known COVID-19 case, health officials in Washington state said at a news conference. A spokespers­on for EvergreenH­ealth Medical Center, Kayse Dahl, said the person died in the facility in the Seattle suburb of Kirkland.

Dr. Frank Riedo, medical director of Infection Control at Evergreen, said local

hospitals are seeing people with severe coronaviru­s symptoms but it’s probable that there are more cases in the community.

“This is the tip of the iceberg,” he said. The health officials reported two cases of COVID-19 virus connected to a longterm care facility in the same suburb, Life Care Center of Kirkland. One is a Life Care worker, a woman in her 40s who is in satisfacto­ry condition at a hospital, and the other is a woman in her 70s and a resident at Life Care who is hospitaliz­ed in serious condition. Neither had traveled abroad.

“In addition, over 50 individual­s associated with Life Care are reportedly ill with respirator­y symptoms or hospitaliz­ed with pneumonia or other respirator­y conditions of unknown cause and are being tested for COVID-19,” Seattle and King County officials said. “Additional positive cases are expected.”

Amy Reynolds of the Washington state health department said in a brief telephone interview: “We are dealing with an emergency evolving situation.”

A growing number of cases in California, Washington state and Oregon are confoundin­g authoritie­s because the infected people hadn’t recently traveled overseas or had any known close contact with a traveler or an infected person.

The U.S. has about 60 confirmed cases. Worldwide, the number of people sickened by the virus hovered Friday around 83,000, and there were more than 2,800 deaths, most of them in China. A 60-year-old U.S. citizen died in Wuhan in early February.

Most infections result in mild symptoms, including coughing and fever, though some can become more serious and lead to pneumonia. Older people, especially those with chronic illnesses such as heart or lung disease, are especially vulnerable. Health officials think it spreads mainly from droplets when an infected person coughs or sneezes, similar to how the flu spreads.

The number of coronaviru­s cases in the United States is considered small. But convinced that they will grow, health agencies are ramping up efforts to identify those who might be sick.

To achieve more rapid testing capacity, the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion issued an accelerate­d policy Saturday enabling laboratori­es to use tests they develop. FDA Commission­er Stephen Hahn said his agency is “rapidly responding and adapting to this dynamic and evolving situation.”

The California Department of Public Health said Friday that the state will receive enough kits from the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention to test up to 1,200 people a day for the COVID-19 virus – a day after Gov. Gavin Newsom complained to federal health officials that the state had already exhausted its initial 200 test kits.

Oregon was able to more quickly identify a case – an employee of an elementary school in Lake Oswego near Portland because it was able to test a sample locally. School district officials said Saturday the employee had been visited in the hospital by several people before he was diagnosed. Those individual­s have been asked to observe a twoweek quarantine and are being closely monitored.

The district is deep-cleaning all its schools and all school buses with the goal of having students back in class Monday.

 ?? Bloomberg photo by Camilla Cerea ?? A commuter on a tramway wears a mask with the Duomo cathedral in the background in Milan, Italy, on Feb. 27, 2020.
Bloomberg photo by Camilla Cerea A commuter on a tramway wears a mask with the Duomo cathedral in the background in Milan, Italy, on Feb. 27, 2020.

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