The Mercury News

Three residents of a Washington State nursing care facility have died from coronaviru­s.

- By Mike Baker

SEATTLE » Three more residents of a Washington state nursing care facility have died from coronaviru­s, officials announced Monday, bringing to six the death toll in the United States and intensifyi­ng the crisis in this state, where the nursing facility in Kirkland has become a focus of illness and fear.

All of the deaths in the country have occurred in Washington state in the last few days, and leaders in the Seattle area said Monday that they intended to open isolation centers in an effort to contain an emerging coronaviru­s outbreak.

Four people who had been residents of the nursing center have died, and four other residents of the center as well as a worker there have learned they have the virus. Two other people, not connected to the center, have also died in Washington state, including a new death announced by officials Monday.

Dow Constantin­e, executive of King County, said he had signed an emergency declaratio­n for the county, which was preparing to buy a motel in the Seattle area where people who are infected with coronaviru­s could stay to remain isolated.

He said officials also were considerin­g using modular housing units for residents in need of isolation but not hospitaliz­ation, as a way to free up access to medical facilities. “We need that hospital capacity for treatment,” Constantin­e said.

More testing for the virus was expected across the region as Kirkland became a center of both illness and fear, much of it focused on the nursing facility, Life Care Center.

By Sunday, a quarter of Kirkland’s firefighte­rs were in quarantine because they had been to the nursing facility. A nearby college spent the day cleansing its campus because students had visited the nursing home. The hospital has asked visitors to stay away.

More than 90 people have been treated for coronaviru­s in the United States, and more than 18 of those people were in Washington state, including the first confirmed case of the virus, weeks ago, a high school student; and a man who died Saturday, the first death tied to coronaviru­s on U.S. soil.

In at least 12 of the Washington state cases, officials have said they were unaware of any connection to overseas travel that might explain the origin. Such cases signaled that the virus had spread within the United States, experts said.

The fear and confusion at the nursing facility and throughout the county presented a vivid and disturbing picture of how much uncertaint­y surrounds the virus and how many people have the potential to be affected.

The nursing facility in Kirkland, run by Life Care Centers of America, is full of older residents who can be especially vulnerable to respirator­y illnesses. Records show that the center has a recent history of illness outbreaks and of difficulty observing infection control precaution­s.

Relatives who had recently visited the facility said that it had been coping with illness among residents and staff in recent days and that Friday it told all residents to stay in their rooms. For a facility of communal living — with a shared dining center, group movie nights and friends who visit with one another in the halls — that decision prompted concerns among residents and families.

 ?? DAVID RYDER – GETTY IMAGES ?? Health care workers transport a patient on a stretcher into an ambulance at the Life Care Center nursing facility in Kirkland, Wash., on Saturday.
DAVID RYDER – GETTY IMAGES Health care workers transport a patient on a stretcher into an ambulance at the Life Care Center nursing facility in Kirkland, Wash., on Saturday.

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