NY woman in 50s becomes US' 11th swine flu death

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CRISTIAN SALAZAR | May 24, 2009 09:25 PM EST | AP

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NEW YORK — A woman died over the weekend of swine flu, becoming the city's second victim and the nation's 11th.

The woman, who was in her 50s, had other health conditions, Department of Health and Mental Hygiene spokeswoman Jessica Scaperotti said. No other information on her case was disclosed Sunday.

Assistant public school principal Mitchell Wiener, who died May 17, was the city's first death from the virus. The 55-year-old had been sick for several days.

There were 280 confirmed cases of swine flu in the city and 94 hospitalizations as of Sunday, Scaperotti said. The number of confirmed cases probably doesn't fully reflect the spread of the virus, given that health officials aren't testing everyone for the H1N1 strain.

"It's most likely that if you're sick with the flu, that you have the H1N1 virus," Scaperotti said.

Those people with chronic health conditions such as diabetes and compromised immune systems who are suffering from flu-like symptoms should seek medical advice, Scaperotti said. Only those with more serious symptoms, such as shortness of breath, should go to emergency rooms, she said.

The health department recommended that physicians prescribe anti-flu drugs such as Tamiflu over the phone to patients with mild flu symptoms who have other health conditions.

Scaperotti said that as the virus spreads "we are going to see more increases of severe illness." She said that each year more than 1,000 people die of seasonal flu in the city.

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The city's first outbreak of swine flu occurred about a month ago, when more than 1,000 teenagers at a Catholic high school in Queens began falling ill following the return of several students from vacations in Mexico, where the virus was first detected.

The virus has coursed through the city's schools and even reached its jail system, where inmates' visiting hours have been limited and hand sanitizer passed around. On Thursday, correction officials said they would sanitize a 2,600-inmate jail on Rikers Island.

The World Health Organization, as of Friday, had tallied more than 12,000 swine flu cases worldwide, with more than half of them in the United States. It counted at least 86 deaths, with 75 of those in Mexico.

Eighteen U.S. soldiers infected with swine flu have recovered after treatment on an American base in Kuwait and left the country, a Kuwaiti health official said Sunday.

"They were treated and they have fully recovered," said Youssef Mandakar, deputy head of Kuwait's public health department. He said the soldiers had shown "mild symptoms" of the disease upon their arrival at an Air Force base.

Kuwaiti authorities confirmed that the soldiers came from the United States but would not say where they had gone, adding that the troops had no contact with the local population and were treated at U.S. military facilities.

Ibrahim Abdul-Hadi, an undersecretary at the Health Ministry, said the U.S. military had examined and quarantined a number of soldiers who mixed with the infected ones.

Kuwait is a major ally of Washington and a logistics base for U.S. military personnel serving in Iraq.

Raad Mahmoud, a spokesman for the Iraqi Health Ministry, said precautions are being taken at airports and border entry points, but he said Iraqi authorities have no authority over U.S. troops and the foreigners who enter with them. He said the U.S. military has to administer medical tests to everybody when they enter the country and the military must present the reports to the ministry.

U.S. Army Maj. Jose Lopez, a military spokesman, said there were no reported cases of swine flu among American troops in Iraq.

Poland's Chief Sanitary Inspectorate on Sunday confirmed the country's third case of swine flu in a 21-year-old who had just returned to Poland from the United States.

Jan Bondar, the spokesman for the state office, said the man returned on Friday and presented himself at a hospital for testing after getting a call from a friend in Washington whom he had spent time with and who had contracted the virus.

The Pole's condition is not serious, Bondar said.

___

Associated Press Writers Chelsea J. Carter in Baghdad, Vanessa Gera in Warsaw and Diana Elias in Kuwait City contributed to this report.

NEW YORK — A woman died over the weekend of swine flu, becoming the city's second victim and the nation's 11th. The woman, who was in her 50s, had other health conditions, Department of Health ...
NEW YORK — A woman died over the weekend of swine flu, becoming the city's second victim and the nation's 11th. The woman, who was in her 50s, had other health conditions, Department of Health ...
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- Yamunation I'm a Fan of Yamunation 3 fans permalink

1000 people die of the regular flu in NYC alone?
That, not swine flu, seems like more of a pandemic to me!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 AM on 05/25/2009

"It's most likely that if you're sick with the flu, that you have the H1N1 virus," Scaperotti said.

In other words the "regular flu" may very well be the swine flu. The problem is that we are not monitoring what is precisely killing people. I'm not all that nervous about it--yet...­but the reason we have kept flu down is that we have been vigilant about creating vaccines towards new strains and watching out. In 1918 the flu killed over a 100,000 people an attitude of sit back and wait is why it was so deadly.

with H1N1 is that it only reacts to

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:56 PM on 05/25/2009

While I agree that 2 deaths does not a pandemic make...but the silence is disturbing­...Why do they always simply say "had other medical complicati­ons." This sounds like equivocation. Why did the schools issue a letter to students telling them "not" to go to the emergency room unless they were almost fainting! The parents I am dealing with are not Manhattanites who can send their kids to doctors but people without health insurance. Of course the number of H1N1 cases is low...we'r­e not looking for them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:19 AM on 05/25/2009
- quidam56 I'm a Fan of quidam56 5 fans permalink

Any flu bug isn't going to be a good combinaiton with MRSA. MRSA killed more people in America last year than AIDS. If you've not heard of it, you will... http://www.wisecountyissues.com/?p=62 Hospitals and emergency rooms are breeding grounds for this Superbug.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:49 AM on 05/25/2009
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Just take your vitamins, exercise regularly and do lots of cardio and your body will be able to fight off the flu successfully :-)

http://www.ShawnDrewry.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:29 AM on 05/25/2009
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20,000 people die of the flu every year

Swine flu has probably killed fewer people than any other strain.

What is wrong with the media? Why do they distract us when there are important things to report?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 PM on 05/24/2009
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It's 36,000 per year, actually. The CDC and WHO estimate approximately a third of the world population will contract H1N1, so if you extrapolate the death rate in the US (about one per 660 infected) and assume only one in three will get it, that comes to around 4.2 times the number of fatalities as the regular flu. But like regular flu, it will target those with weak immune systems first. If you are a habitual taker of antibiotics, this means YOU. Antibiotics weaken your natural immunity to infectious agents and should only be used in extreme cases. I haven't touched an antibiotic in 15 years, not even for my recent peptic ulcer (commonly caused by bacteria in the stomach). I increased my intake of vitamin D, drank water, inclined my mattress and rested. I was symptom free in 5 days.

SOT

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:27 PM on 05/25/2009
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Is this a non-story or what.
I refuse to read past the title.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:03 PM on 05/24/2009

A true progressive!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:49 AM on 05/25/2009
- pokemon I'm a Fan of pokemon 16 fans permalink
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Maybe 10 people will read this.. Best be ready for any flu pandemic, each year is another possible year. No need to live in fear, just stop being so stubborn and realize if it happened in 1918 it can happen today. If 1000 people show up to a hospital at the same time you are not going to get care. People who dismiss this are ignorant and fools.

Ask yourself, when.. not if, when a pandemic hits who is responsibl­e.. thats right you. Not the government who has warned you, not the private sector, not your neighbors.­. YOU. So sit there blowing this off rather then preparing for it, I will laugh when there are people posting that the government is not doing enough, that somehow they need to care for the entire population of over 300 million at the same time. You are on your own, hope your ready.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 PM on 05/24/2009
- whoknew--- I'm a Fan of whoknew--- 15 fans permalink

That's good, that is how everybody should react even in the face of a potentially serious situation whether it be some kind of deadly infectious agent, or any other kind of natural disaster. It would have been better for the media to focus on what citizens can do in the event of a disaster. Knowledge is the tool that can give people a direction and a "game plan". Panic precludes ignorance. Panic is what people do when they do not know what to do in a crisis. Like say a link to the Red Cross and at the very least a great opportunity to educate; http://www.redcross.org/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:48 PM on 05/25/2009
- whoknew--- I'm a Fan of whoknew--- 15 fans permalink

correction----
Panic precedes ignorance.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 PM on 05/25/2009
- Fernando I'm a Fan of Fernando 29 fans permalink
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Can we forget the swine flu story, already?

This death is very unfortunate and the reality is that the strands of flu we are familiar with do have a hand in hundreds of deaths every year. Since the media over-exposed, exaggerated and blew the threat of swine flu out of proportion, why not let it go and try to regain its dignity? After scaring the living daylights out of -literally- the whole world by sensationalizing this story, that would be the appropriate thing to do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:04 PM on 05/24/2009
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I'm interested to see what happens in the Southern Hemisphere this summer (to us). Next fall will tell a bigger story of the effect it's having on the world's population.

Personally, I don't want either my husband or me to catch it...it'd kill us with our other medical issues.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:12 PM on 05/24/2009
- pokemon I'm a Fan of pokemon 16 fans permalink
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hundreds?? might want to read up on that, perhaps average is around 36,000 a year for a normal strain. And frankly if you prepare for it like any disaster there is no more worry.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 PM on 05/24/2009
- ohiomark I'm a Fan of ohiomark 118 fans permalink

How many people died from the "regular" flu virus this year?

I'd be willing to bet the number is much higher.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:02 PM on 05/24/2009
- pokemon I'm a Fan of pokemon 16 fans permalink
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36,000 or so. The issue is that this flu is EASY to catch, and with no natural immunity if it even becomes as deadly as the normal strain that 36,00 will turn into 100,000. Yes not a huge amount but enough to warrant the name pandemic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:27 PM on 05/24/2009
- typicalpol I'm a Fan of typicalpol 2 fans permalink

this person died WITH swine flu

this person did not die FROM swine flu

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:13 PM on 05/24/2009
- happycat I'm a Fan of happycat 114 fans permalink
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Exactly. My kids have the Swine flu now. It is no worse than any other flu strain. It does seem to spread a lot quicker though. I think that it is very important that people understand this. Don't panic and know that the few people who have died "from it," actually had other underlying health problems.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:08 PM on 05/24/2009
- pokemon I'm a Fan of pokemon 16 fans permalink
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Yes but because it spreads so rapidly the complications to people with health issues will cause them to seek treatment earlier.. now make it a bad flu season, the hospitals cannot handle the influx of that size. They are worried because of what it can cause in terms of pressure on a medical system made to handle regional issues, not a national emergency. So better to warn people now, then you can blame them for not heading the warnings.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:30 PM on 05/24/2009

Another one bites the dust.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:58 PM on 05/24/2009
- wdw505 I'm a Fan of wdw505 69 fans permalink

now that was funny

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:17 PM on 05/24/2009
- textynn I'm a Fan of textynn 117 fans permalink
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i wonder how many people there are that have died from swine flu that did not have medical treatment due to our over priced "medical for the privileged only" system we have here in the US.? Of course that number will never be reported, but how could it be, those people don't count anyway and no one looks into their suffering. What do you call a total chump? (Answer) An uninsured organ donor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:43 PM on 05/24/2009
- kellygrrrl I'm a Fan of kellygrrrl 640 fans permalink
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Bingo!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:35 PM on 05/24/2009
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