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Oregon Plague: Woman Contracted Disease From Cat

Oregon Plague

By STEVEN DUBOIS   09/14/12 06:42 PM ET  AP

PORTLAND, Ore. -- A woman who tried to help her friend save the life of a choking cat also contracted the plague from the disease-stricken feline over the summer, health officials said Friday.

The central Oregon woman, who asked not to be identified, has recovered since contracting the disease in June. She was treated after showing early symptoms.

The woman was bitten at the same time as Paul Gaylord, who made national headlines when he almost died from a version of the infection that killed millions in the Middle Ages.

Plague is a bacterial illness spread through the bite of infected fleas or through direct contact with an infected animal or person. The disease is now extremely rare. There are about seven cases a year in the U.S.

The two had found a stray cat in distress, choking on a mouse. They were bitten when they tried unsuccessfully to help the animal.

The 60-year-old Gaylord spent nearly a month on life support. The woman, identified only as a Gaylord family friend, was out of the area when she started showing symptoms, including fever, chills and pain in the lymph nodes. She was treated with antibiotics at a Portland hospital.

"We got to her just in time," said Karen Yeargain of the Crook County Health Department.

"If this hadn't happened, we would have had another critically ill person on our hands," she added.

Health officials suspected the woman had the plague, but it was not confirmed until lab results from the federal Centers for Disease Control came back last week, Yeargain said.

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PORTLAND, Ore. -- A woman who tried to help her friend save the life of a choking cat also contracted the plague from the disease-stricken feline over the summer, health officials said Friday. The ce...
PORTLAND, Ore. -- A woman who tried to help her friend save the life of a choking cat also contracted the plague from the disease-stricken feline over the summer, health officials said Friday. The ce...
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10:02 PM on 09/20/2012
You guys are all missing the bigger story. The guy's last name is gaylord!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
peachfuzz
my favorite color is pinko
01:38 PM on 09/18/2012
Not wise to approach stray animals, you just do not know what is going on and how they will react, as much as you want to help. Call Animal Control. If a wild cat eats too much, well ... so be it.
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11:35 AM on 09/18/2012
It was probably a feral cat. Next time I bet you'll let nature take it's course!
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Forever Jung
I can't go on, I'll go on.
10:52 AM on 09/18/2012
My question is: Did the Cat kill the Mouse or did the Mouse kill the cat?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
town281guy
sick of pc
10:07 PM on 09/17/2012
I feel sorry for their misfortune, but I'd only help an animal that trusted me. Cats are not trusting animals like dogs; they are ready to scratch & bite owners that raised them lovingly from kittenhood and these were 2 strangers to an alley cat already in a panic because it could not breathe.
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larryjensen554
When bad men combine,the good must associate
12:03 AM on 09/18/2012
Sick looking cat calls for fast action...shoot it or hit it in the head with a club...rabid...
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Di Gray
I can give as good as I get. Remember that.
07:32 PM on 09/17/2012
There is no way I'd go out of my way to help a stray animal choking on its arch rival.

This cat they didn't know was choking on a mouse...and they decided to help? I don't mean to be insensitive but that is unbelievable to me. How many times do people need to be told that animals are not people?
08:09 AM on 09/18/2012
While I agree stray animals can be dangerous to help because they are far more feral than our domestic pets...by no means does that not mean we shouldn't try to help them when we can.

That doesn't mean you have to try and catch the thing, for this very reason of potential transmittable illness...All you have to do is call animal control so they can help. Also, to put animals beneath humans is not the right solution either.
05:19 PM on 09/18/2012
Animals are beneath humans, that's why they become our 'pets'...they certainly don't become our equals.
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Di Gray
I can give as good as I get. Remember that.
02:49 AM on 09/19/2012
I see your point.  And for you final point, I disagree.  I believe that animals are beneath humans.  In saying that, I don't believe animals should be abused by way of the fact that they are beneath us.  There's no justification for that. What I am saying though is that if put in a position to choose whether I would save an animal or a person, I'd likely choose a person.  In other words, if my cat and child were in a burning building and I had to choose which I would try to save first, it certainly wouldn't be my cat.  Animals are not people.  Do they get some regard?  Sure.  Are they equal to my children, my parents and siblings and friends?  No way.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
californiananc
My kittens do my typing.
07:09 PM on 09/17/2012
Yikes, that looks horrible!
02:23 PM on 09/17/2012
Very scary and gross.. I wouldnt have tried to help the cat like that, especially a stray one...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
californiananc
My kittens do my typing.
07:10 PM on 09/17/2012
Maybe the cat lied about being a stray.
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psandysdad
The older you get, the more excuses you have.
02:15 PM on 09/17/2012
"Cat Scratch Fever" writ large.
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
05:04 PM on 09/17/2012
No, that's something else.
02:14 PM on 09/17/2012
History repeating itself.
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12:52 PM on 09/17/2012
Make me sad. :(
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JoeyDee2
I know what just passed here
12:42 PM on 09/17/2012
How medieval. Fits the times coming.
02:29 PM on 09/17/2012
Yeah, I sure hope we can avoid sinking back into barbaric, Christian fundamentalism as well.
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larryjensen554
When bad men combine,the good must associate
12:06 AM on 09/18/2012
Or back farther before humans were civilized and behaved like the animals you choose to emulate...
12:41 PM on 09/17/2012
and as for the cat choking, it is natural to want to help it. but a stray animal will be defensive and may carry diseases. i wouldn't have reached into it's mouth, i have ' heimliched ' a cat and a very small turtle the same way,, i saw a huge lump in their throat that seemed to be causing them to choke ( eyes bugging out and mouths stuck open in silent coughing ) and i rolled the lump from their throat up to their mouths and they vomited up the ' problems' . both lived. my cats had swallows a ball of tin foil and my turtle had eaten to much and fast. but thats how i saved to choking pets. although i do understand thats the incorrect method for dogs.
12:31 PM on 09/17/2012
well that is one of the many countless reasons to have yourself, your family AND of corse your pets vaccinated. ! flesh-eating bacteria mumps and all these other horrible things that used to be a danger in only some places are resurfacing because in part people are deciding vaccines aren't important for their children ( and to hell with everyone else they come into contact with right .? ! ) and alot of people especialy some children these days have weakened immune systems and less access to health care. as for this paticular inccident if for no other reason then, keep an eye on what your dog or cat puts in their mouth. since they lick your face and sleep on your lap . !
02:05 PM on 09/17/2012
Agreed. I was just at the clinic getting assorted vaccinations for my trip. The doctor told me how she just watched an 8 year old die from a tetanus infection. So stupid. My tetanus vaccination was like $12 and it lasts 10 years. Yellow fever is expensive though.
04:58 PM on 09/17/2012
There's a load of more cases of children dying horrid deaths due to side effects of vaccination than otherwise. You should research more.

Sorry for the kid.
02:31 PM on 09/17/2012
They don't vaccinate for bubonic plaque. So, though your advice is sound, it has no bearing on this story.
11:53 AM on 09/17/2012
there are still many places, especially in the western mountain and desert areas where plague in endemic. not only rats, but any animal - including dead carcases - are risky if they carry fleas. that includes cats, rats, squirrels, etc.

it's a dangerous world out there but that's no reason to hide in the basement. act rationally, be reasonably cautious. if you see an animal in distress, sometimes there isn't any practical thing you can do except call local animal control or the local forestry / dec.