No Prior Existing Conditions but Dead Anyway

Nurses COVID

Published

http://www.todaystmj4.com/news/local/48007842.html

Who would think that a normally healthy woman would die so swiftly from influenza in June?

Could you ever have imagined such a thing? No wonder her family and friends are in shock.

So why did it happen?

Barbara Davis, 48, was healthy just a week ago. She had dinner with her mother Josephine last Friday night. But just hours after that dinner, Josephine got a phone call.

"My friend, he called me and told me Barbara was real sick. And I said, "Well, she wasn't sick when I left, so what's the matter?" Josephine Davis said.

Barbara told her mother that she was ok. But the next day, things got worse. She had trouble breathing, and she was shaking. She could barely walk into the hospital.

"She tried to talk to people, but she just couldn't talk," Josephine Davis said.

Doctors treated her for two days, but they couldn't save her. They believe she died from swine flu.

"They've never seen nothing like that, what she had. That infection just went through her body, attacking her kidney, her lungs, her liver. Everything," said Josephine Davis.

The Milwaukee Health Department confirmed on Friday a Milwaukee adult with no underlying medical conditions died from swine flu, though they haven't confirmed Barbara Davis was that victim.

Barbara's family knows all too well how serious swine flu can be.

"Everybody is just in a shock. The people that I talked to today, they are frightened. Because it happened all of a sudden," Josephine Davis said.

More than 1,800 people have caught swine flu in Milwaukee alone. The city's Health Department is stressing that if you are mildly ill with flu symptoms, you should call your doctor. If your symptoms are serious or if you have mild symptoms that are getting worse, you should see a doctor right away.

http://www.wisn.com/health/19751526/detail.html

The Milwaukee County Medical Examiner said 48-year-old Barbara Davis died Thursday in the ICU after being diagnosed with the flu strain.

The health department said, unlike Milwaukee's first swine flu victim, Davis did not have any "underlying medical conditions" that would have put her at a greater risk for the disease.

http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showpost.php?p=248304&postcount=7

This post was written by Dr. Gratten Woodsen, MD commenting over at flutrackers on this unfortunate woman's case.

The decedent is described as having fulminate multi-organ failure that developed rapidly resulting in death 48 hours after onset and despite intensive medical therapy in an ICU including all the bells and whistles.

The attending physicians told the mother that they had never seen anything like this before and I believe them. So did she. No one has seen anything like this since 1918. In 1918 many doctors said the say thing after dealing with their first cases of Spanish Flu and for them too it was a great surprise at least until those that didn't die from the virus themselves had seen it so many times that it was no longer unique.

There are numerous descriptions from the 1918 pandemic that match the one above but no where else in medical history do we find anything remotely similar. This is why the doctors in Milwaukee were so shocked by what they saw.

How many other North American victims had similar pathology? Why have the autopsy and clinical findings from the deaths in Mexico, the US and Canada been suppressed?

I know from press reports that there have been other US deaths where multi-organ failure was present. Is this common among those who have died of Swine Flu or rare? Are the findings similar to those seen in 1918 or not?

(hat tip flutrackers/skatman)

Specializes in Too many to list.

Brooklyn Park, Maryland

http://wjz.com/local/H1N1.vaccine.flu.2.1261725.html

Walter Jr., was full of life, an energetic college freshman from Brooklyn Park, until last Wednesday, when he was hospitalized with a suspected case of swine flu.

"Last time I talked to him, he just kept saying, 'I love you, I love you mom.' That was before they intubated him, before they intubated him," said Denise Brooks, mother.

On Tuesday, doctors amputated Walter's legs in a last ditch effort to rejuvenate his internal organs, but the surgery was unsuccessful.

"If you told me he was shot or hit by a car, or in an accident, I could learn to accept more than the flu taking him away. It just doesn't make sense how it can take a health 18-year-old boy with no medical condition at all," said Denise.

(hat tip pfi/pandemicprepared)

Specializes in OB, HH, ADMIN, IC, ED, QI.

I understood that orders for H1N1 flu vaccine were being filled for private doctors as well as Public Health Clinics. Since vaccination is free through federally supported Public Health clinics, I understand why people are trying to get their vaccine there. However it's important to get the vaccine for H1N1, and doctors have gotten it.

I haven't heard that private doctors are running out of it, and the manufacturers know to which physicians they sent it, and how much went to individual doctors' offices. If they're not using all their vaccine, doctors should sell their excess vaccine doses to the Public health Departments' clinics, in my opinion. That front is a little too quiet for my comfort.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Billings, Montana

http://www.missoulian.com/news/local/article_c97ad050-c0a9-11de-a460-001cc4c03286.html

Health officials have confirmed that a 6-year-old Yellowstone County boy has died of complications related to swine flu.

Dr. Fred Kahn, an infectious disease specialist with St. Vincent Healthcare in Billings, said during a news conference Friday the boy died about two weeks ago of pneumonia due to complications related to influenza A, a subtype of swine flu. The diagnosis was confirmed by the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services.

Kahn says the boy, who died in the pediatric intensive care unit at St. Vincent, was healthy and did not have any underlying health problems when he contracting the swine flu.

(hat tip flutrackers/treyfish)

Specializes in Too many to list.

Ottawa, Ontario

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/ottawa/story/2009/10/26/eastern-ont-h1n1-death.html

A previously healthy pre-teen girl from eastern Ontario has died at an Ottawa hospital after being diagnosed with H1N1 influenza.

Dr. Paul Roumeliotis, medical officer of health for the Eastern Ontario Health Unit, said the girl had no pre-existing medical conditions when she was admitted to hospital, where she died over the weekend.

"My concern is that it underscores the importance that we put onto the potential complications of any flu, especially a novel flu like H1N1," Roumeliotis told CBC News.

(hat tip pfi/pixie)

Specializes in Too many to list.

Kansas City, Kansas

http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/kansascity/obituary.aspx?page=lifestory&pid=135105035

BERNHARDY Charles Alan Bernhardy, 39, of Kansas City, Kan., passed away October 26, 2009, at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Chuck fought hard for 21 days before passing from H1N1 virus. His family would like the public to be aware that even the healthy can be affected. Survivors include mother, Hazel Hook; brothers, Robert and Ronald Hook; step brother, Eddie Hook; sister, Alicia Hook; step sisters, Ronnette, Kathy and Laura; nephews, James and Zachary; niece, Alexandra.

(hat tip flutrackers/shiloh)

Specializes in Too many to list.

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

http://www.570news.com/news/national/more.jsp?content=n271496418

The swine-flu death of an otherwise healthy hockey-playing teen came without warning and should serve as a lesson to parents to keep a close eye on their ill children, the boy's grief-stricken father said Tuesday.

Paul Frustaglio said it took barely more than a day for the H1N1 flu virus to kill Evan - his "best friend" - who turned 13 last month, a fatality that public health officials called rare.

"He fell so quickly," Frustaglio told The Canadian Press. "I was watching him. I was there when he died."

(hat tip flutrackers/Shiloh)

Specializes in Too many to list.

Moss Bluff, Louisiana

http://www.kplctv.com/global/story.asp?s=11403367

Jonathon Fontenot of Moss Bluff died last night after being airlifted to Lake Charles Memorial Hospital around 9:30 PM.

"I don't know how to describe it, I'm such in shock," says Chris Fontenot, Jonathon's father. "I can't believe that my son is gone. "

Chris says his son Jonathon was healthy and well just a few days ago.

"He went to the doctor yesterday and was diagnosed with the flu," says Chris. "They started him on a typical flu treatment."

(hat tip flutrackers/RoRo)

Specializes in Clinical Research, Outpt Women's Health.

Thanks for keeping us upto date.

Specializes in Too many to list.

South Plains, Texas

http://www.kcbd.com/global/Story.asp?s=11409702

A South Plains woman died Wednesday night after complications from the H1N1 virus.

H1N1 was not the official cause of death, instead we have been told it was pneumonia. Prior to her diagnosis with H1N1 she was a healthy woman, approximately 37-years-old.

(hat tip pfi/K of Mi)

Specializes in Too many to list.

Ogden, Utah

http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=8492936

Weber State math teacher Diane Pugmire died Wednesday in the hospital. Her death stunned family, friends and her students. She came down with flu-like symptoms just Monday.

Thursday evening her family received word from the Weber-Morgan Health Department that the cause of death in this case was bacterial pneumonia, with complications from the H1N1 flu virus.

Her family says Pugmire had been completely healthy, exercising every day.

Pugmire was taken to the hospital where, her family says, doctors discovered fluid in her lungs. After fighting for her life Tuesday, she died early Wednesday morning.

(hat tip K from Mi)

Chances are that several other people in this family had it also. The question is WHY in a group of people with the same genetic makeup does one die when the others get better. I hope there will be a lot of study and someone can come up with an answer or answers to that question.
Specializes in Too many to list.

Baltimore, Maryland

http://www.wbaltv.com/news/21468633/detail.html

"I'm numb. There are still questions," Bishop said. "It's really hard, especially when you know your son had no previous illnesses. He was in perfect shape."

Bishop said the whole family got sick one by one with coughs, chills and fever.

Her son went to Harbor Hospital on Oct. 5. Bishop said doctors sent him home with medicine for pain and coughing, but he returned to the hospital two days later by ambulance because he was having trouble breathing.

"I rush down there, and he's on a ventilator. I'm in shock. (I'm thinking) what in the world is going on here? He was on a ventilator until he passed away," Bishop said.

(hat tip pfi/homebody)

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