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jdljr1
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Topic: Mystery Illness Maryland Kills 75%. Posted: March 06 2012 at 3:36pm |
Ominous story on multiple websites today, but thus far an isolated incident-I hope. John L.
The Calvert County Health Department is investigating a cluster of deaths following respiratory illnesses in the Lusby area.
The county health department told News4 four family members who live near the Calvert Cliffs nuclear facility fell ill with an unidentified respiratory illness at the end of February, and three died this month.
An 81-year-old woman was the first to become sick, in late February. The woman's three adult children, two daughters and a son, traveled to her home to care for her. Subsquently, they became sick with similar health problems.
According to the health department, the 81-year-old died presented symptoms of respiratory illness Feb. 23 and died March 1. The children showed symptoms around Feb. 28 and were hospitalized in critical condition. Several days later, the 58-year-old son and the 56-year-old daughter died, and the third daughter remains hospitalized.
One of the bodies was taken to Baltimore for an autopsy, Maryland Medical Examiner David Fowler said
Health officer David Rogers, in a statement released March 6, said the county health department does not believe the illness represents a widespread health threat. Health officials have not recommended protective actions for the general public.
"The cases appear to be confined to a single family," Rogers wrote, "and there are currently no other affected individuals at this time. CCHD is not recommending any protective actions for the general public."
In an earlier statement, the county erroneously reported four deaths.
The department recommends people with flu-like symptoms like fever, cough or sore throat contact their doctors to see if they would benefit from antiviral or other medications. Currently, county health officials are not advising any specific preventive measures.
CCHD sent a message to area residents to say it was working together with health care providers to monitor the situation and determine a cause for the respiratory illness. A spokesperson told News4 the victims' proximity to the power plant was not believed to be a factor.
Monday afternoon, a crew of health workers dressed in hazardous material suits entered the woman's house and collected more samples for testing.
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John L
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SheepLady
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Posted: March 06 2012 at 7:37pm |
Hello, All,
Thanks to John L for a very good post. He is on the ball.
I remembered we were really looking for these symptoms a few years ago, detailed in these reports. My heart goes out to this family.
I have been trying to post a couple of links detailing the symptoms but they seem to be no longer working.
I am puzzled at this. A certain word or site seems not to come up except as asterisks?
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Albert
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 3:33am |
Good job John.
Apparently it's influenza A.
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Albert
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 3:41am |
Mysterious flu strain nearly wipes out family as two siblings die taking care of sickened mother... and the third sibling remains deathly ill
A mysterious flu strain nearly wiped out a family, killing an 81-year-old woman and two of her children who were taking care of her. A third sibling remains deathly ill.
Lou Ruth Blake took sick with a respiratory infection February 23 and her son and two daughters rushed to her home in rural Lusby, Maryland.
Five days later, her children all came down with similar symptoms, likely tied to a particularly virulent bout of the flu.
Suit up: CDC and state health officials took no chances searching the home where four people caught a deadly strain of flu
Fell ill: Lou Ruth Blake, 81, died five days before two of her children who were taking care of her
But there were further complications. When Ms Blake's three children went to the hospital, they were coughing up blood and showed signs of a staph bacterial infections, as well, the Washington Post reported.
Ms Blake died March 1 at MedStar Washington Hospital Center after being treated for Influenza A and underlying medical conditions.
Her son Lowell, 58, and her daughter Vanessa, 56, died Monday -- five days after their mother -- after they were hospitalized with the same virulent flu strain, as well.
Ms Blake's second daughter, age 51, is currently in critical condition with the same collection of symptoms -- a deadly respiratory infection caused by Influenza A and a staph infection.
On Tuesday, officials from the Maryland Department of Health and the federal Centers for Disease Control wearing full containment suits -- complete with air tanks so they wouldn't breathe the air -- searched the house for clues about what might have made the flu so potent.
Dr William Schaffner, chair of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, told ABC News a traditional flu virus might have mutated when Ms Blake caught it into an enhanced version of the deadly 'Swine Flu' from two years ago.
However, the Calvert County Health Officer Dr David L. Rogers told WUSA-TV the strain seems to be contained to only Ms Blake's family who stayed at her house. There is no reason to believe anyone else could contract that particular flu virus, he added.
Officials with the CDC will conduct autopsies to determine exactly which strain of the flu virus killed the family.
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coyote
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 5:04am |
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CIDRAP: Maryland officials probe fatal respiratory illness cluster
Mar 6, 2012 (CIDRAP News) - Maryland health officials are investigating a cluster of severe respiratory illnesses in a Calvert County family that led to the deaths of an elderly woman and two adult children who cared for her.
The Calvert County Health Department (CCHD), which released the first details about the cases in an e-mail alert, posted a press release on its Web site today and has updated the information twice as new details became available. (Snip) it is investigating a cluster of illnesses and deaths in a Lusby area family. (Snip) the illnesses are confined to a single family, and the CCHD isn't recommending any specific precautions for the general public.
The first case is in an 81-year-old woman who got sick on Feb 23 at her home, where she received care from three of her children, a son and two daughters. The caregivers became ill with similar upper respiratory symptoms on Feb 28. All were hospitalized. The woman, her 58-year-old son, and her 56-year-old daughter died, and the other daughter is hospitalized at Washington Hospital Center. As of 4:30 pm US eastern time this afternoon, no new cases had been reported. The CCHD said the state medical examiner is investigating deaths to determine the cause of the illnesses.
(Snip) state health officials are working with local health officials to investigate the cause of the illnesses and that the state's public health lab will conduct additional testing. (Snip) the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is aware of the situation.
Calvert County Public Schools posted a health alert on its Web site today, saying the district was in contact with the CCHD, which so far has not advised schools to take any specific precautions.
(Snip)
A CCHD spokesperson said the family's proximity to Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant was not believed to be a factor in the outbreak (Snip) Lusby is located in southern Maryland, and an earlier version of the CCHD press release said the woman's home was in a rural setting.
The CCHD (Snip) urged people with flulike illnesses to contact their healthcare providers. http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidr...
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Albert
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 7:40am |
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There are not a lot of precautions they can take at this point. If this flu bug get its legs, there won't be a lot they can do to help anyone either way.
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jacksdad
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 8:21am |
Albert wrote:
When Ms Blake's three children went to the hospital, they were coughing up blood... |
That's a little ominous.
Let's hope it doesn't get it's legs, A 
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"Buy it cheap. Stack it deep" "Any community that fails to prepare, with the expectation that the federal government will come to the rescue, will be tragically wrong." Michael Leavitt, HHS Secretary.
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jacksdad
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 8:48am |
UPDATE: Unexplained Calvert Deaths
Calvert County, MD - 3/7/2012
CALVERT COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT PRESS RELEASE:
Initial testing of two of four family members in Lusby, three of whom have died, suggests that the serious lung infection suffered by all four was a complication of seasonal flu. A fourth family member remains hospitalized at Washington Hospital Center and is improving.
Samples have been sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta for further testing.
These cases of serious lung infection were isolated to a single family and there are currently no other affected individuals. Local healthcare providers are not reporting any significant increase in patients with flu-like symptoms.
The illnesses in these family members began with an 81-year-old Lusby woman who developed respiratory symptoms at her home beginning on or about February 23, 2012. She was cared for at home by three of her children, a son and two daughters. The caregivers developed similar respiratory symptoms on or about February 28, 2012. The mother died at home on March 1, 2012. Following her death the three children were hospitalized. Subsequently the 58-year-old son and a 56-year-old daughter died.
As always, we recommend that everyone take routine precautions to prevent the spread of respiratory infections including hand washing and limiting contact with sick individuals. Those with flu-like symptoms, who develop cough, fever or sore throat, should be evaluated by their healthcare provider. Residents who have not received a seasonal flu vaccine are urged to get one from their healthcare provider or by calling Calvert County Health Department at 410-535-5400, ext. 349.
Original story: www.thebaynet.com/news/index.cfm/fa/viewstory/story_ID/26533 |
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"Buy it cheap. Stack it deep" "Any community that fails to prepare, with the expectation that the federal government will come to the rescue, will be tragically wrong." Michael Leavitt, HHS Secretary.
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Albert
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 8:59am |
If it has been identified as "seasonal flu", they better check for a variant. And it could be a severe variant if that's the case. h1n1v or h3n2v.
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Albert
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 9:07am |
Calvert County deaths linked to Influenza A
Three family members in the Lusby area died and another has become ill in a case that authorities believe is contained within the affected family.
The victims were all related and lived in the Rousby Hall Road neighborhood in Lusby. Authorities Tuesday said two of the victims died from Influenza A that was made worse through an underlying infection. Authorities have also confirmed that a third victim who was hospitalized has Influenza A.
The first patient, 83-year-old Ruth Blake, became sick on Feb. 23. Three of her children--a son and two daughters all in their 50s--arrived on Feb. 28 to take care of her.
Blake died on March 1. One daughter, 56, and her son, 58, both died on Monday while a third daughter, 51, remains at Wash Hospital Center in critical condition.
Authorities have not confirmed Blake's cause of death. The deceased siblings both died from Influenza A and the surviving sibling also has Influenza A.
"We have a positive test from the CDC that said the brother and sister who died had Influenza A in their blood," said Dr. Janis Orlowski with Med Star Washington Hospital Center. "We're asking the question, is this a stronger flu. We have no evidence to support it but that's what we're looking for."
Doctors don't know how Ruth Blake died, but they suspect she spread the flu to her children.
“The presumption is the three children caught this from their mother, not at a workplace and we have no knowledge that they were anywhere other than in the home,” says Dr. David Rogers of the Calvert County Health Department. "This is an extremely unusual event."
Donning protective suits, Calvert County Health Department officials took no chances Tuesday as they went into the home to do testing.
Health officials say the cause of the illness has not been confirmed, Environmental testing on the house will be done.
In a statement released Tuesday morning, the department says they "will continue to work with the health care providers and others on this situation and will update Calvert County residents if new information important to their health becomes available.”
Public health officials are fairly confident no one else is in danger from the super infection that ravaged the family.
"It's heart wrenching," said neighbor April Ricker. "I don't understand why God would do something like that to the family."
Comment: Sounds like a super flu bug. If we see another severe cluster in the next few days, then of course we go to plan B. Most likely, and hopefully, it's isolated.
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Albert
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 9:14am |
jacksdad wrote:
Albert wrote:
When Ms Blake's three children went to the hospital, they were coughing up blood... |
That's a little ominous.
Let's hope it doesn't get it's legs, A  |
Roger that one Jacksdad. Coughing up blood put's it in a league of severity rivaling that of h5n1. Another severe cluster, and life as we know it could change rather quickly. That's just the reality of it. Damn near judgment day.
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coyote
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 9:25am |
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Hi gang..Ya kinda scary..Let's hope that nothing comes out of this...anyway glad that we did a lot more of replenishing our supplies over the weekend! Best dan
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jacksdad
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 12:37pm |
First thing that struck me was that it sounded like a cytokine storm, Albert. Hopefully it's contained because whatever it is, it's clearly already H2H with a 75% CFR if the remaining family member survives.
This is how it starts. Fingers crossed it's not this outbreak.
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"Buy it cheap. Stack it deep" "Any community that fails to prepare, with the expectation that the federal government will come to the rescue, will be tragically wrong." Michael Leavitt, HHS Secretary.
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jdljr1
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 1:53pm |
Many questions, but few answers thus far. We have now learned that it was an H3 flu. But which one, the Perth variety in the vaccine, or an H3N2v vaccine resistant variant? And was it the flu that killled these people, or instead their secondary infection?
Most of all will this stay isolated, or is it beginning to show up further?
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Flu Strain Identified in 2 Calvert County Deaths
Flu strain among those circulating this season
| Wednesday, Mar 7, 2012 | Updated 3:43 PM EST
A health worker leaves the Lusby home of an 81-year-old woman who died from respiratory illness on March 1.
Lab testing identified the same strain of influenza in two of the three victims who died with respiratory sickness last week in Calvert County.
The county's health department has been investigating a cluster of illnesses that led to three deaths in Lusby, MD, near the Calvert Cliffs nuclear facility.
The Maryland Department of Health and Mental Health said on Wednesday afternoon that Influenza H3, a strain of Influenza A that has been circulating this season, was found in two of the cases.
The department said in both cases, bacterial co-infections, a known complication of flu infection, also contributed to the victims' deaths.
An 81-year-old woman was the first to fall sick, in late February. The woman's three adult children, two daughters and a son, traveled to her home to care for her. Subsequently, they became sick as well with similar symptoms. The mother and two of her children died in the first week of March.
On Monday afternoon, a team wearing hazardous material suits from the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene entered the home of the 81-year-old to collect samples. The Maryland Health Department, Maryland Emergency Management, and the Calvert County Health Department say they are continuing a coordinated investigation.
Currently, Maryland public health officials say there are no other clusters of severe respiratory illnesses like this case elsewhere in the state. The flu season is expected to stretch into late May.
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Find this article at: http://www.nbcwashington.com/news/health/Flu-Strain-Identified-in-2-Calvert-County-Deaths-141794243.html |
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John L
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DANNYKELLEY
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 2:18pm |
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What are the odds that this is contained to this one family??
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WHAT TO DO????
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jacksdad
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Posted: March 07 2012 at 3:22pm |
5th Calvert family member at hospital
By Lena H. Sun, Wednesday, March 7, 11:00 AM
A fifth member of the Calvert County family stricken by serious lung infections and complications of flu is at MedStar Washington Hospital Center for evaluation, a spokeswoman said Wednesday. Three family members have died in the past week.
The newest person to come under medical attention is the sister of Lou Ruth Blake, 81. Blake died at her home in Lusby on March 1. The sister has a fever but does not appear to have other flulike symptoms, the spokeswoman said.
Blake’s son, 58, and one daughter, 56, died Monday after they were hospitalized with upper respiratory symptoms. They had been taking care of their mother.
A second daughter, 51, who had also been a caregiver, is improving and is likely to be moved out of intensive care some time Wednesday, according to hospital spokeswoman So Young Pak.
Hospital officials said tests confirmed that the siblings who died had a strain of the influenza A virus and each also acquired a serious staph infection before they were hospitalized. The two developed severe bacterial pneumonia, which is not uncommon in people infected with the flu virus. The flu virus weakens and damages the lungs, and infection develops when bacteria invade.
Calvert County health officials said in a statement Wednesday that the cases were isolated to a single family and “there are currently no other affected individuals.” They said local health-care providers are not reporting any significant increase in patients with flulike symptoms.
Calvert County health officials have also been testing inside Blake’s home to determine whether there are additional substances there that could have contributed to the illnesses.
© The Washington Post Company
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"Buy it cheap. Stack it deep" "Any community that fails to prepare, with the expectation that the federal government will come to the rescue, will be tragically wrong." Michael Leavitt, HHS Secretary.
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coyote
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Posted: March 08 2012 at 3:00am |
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US: Maryland tests confirm flu, bacterial co-infections in family case cluster
Mar 7, 2012 (CIDRAP News) - Lab tests conducted by the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (MDHMH) have revealed that two patients in a family cluster of four severe respiratory disease cases had the seasonal H3 influenza strain, complicated by bacterial co-infections, the department announced today.
State authorities and their colleagues in Calvert County have been investigating a cluster of severe respiratory illnesses that led to the deaths of an 81-year-old woman from Lusby and two adult children who cared for her after she got sick and until she died on Mar 1. Another of the woman's daughters is hospitalized with similar symptoms.
More lab testing and an investigation into the cases are ongoing, the MDHMH said in a press release. The release did not specify which two patients the flu confirmation pertained to.
The Calvert County Department of Health (CCDH) said in a statement today that initial tests on two of the four family members suggest that the serious respiratory infection suffered by all four is a complication of seasonal flu. It said a fourth family member is still hospitalized at MedStar Washington Hospital Center and is improving.
The elderly woman's 58-year-old son was treated at the same hospital, where he died on Mar 5, and his 51-year-old sister is receiving care, after first being treated at Calvert Memorial Hospital, the Washington Post reported yesterday. Their 56-year-old sister also died on Mar 5.
Janis Orlowski, MD, chief medical officer with MedStar Washington Hospital Center, told the Post yesterday that the siblings who died had influenza A infections, along with serious Staphylococcus (staph) infections that they likely acquired before they were hospitalized, given that they arrived with fever, aches, cough, and shortness of breath.
Health officials so far haven't released any information on what type of staph infection the patients had. Tom Skinner, a spokesman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told CIDRAP News that the CDC is expecting to receive some samples to test, and results will be shared with state and local officials first. Continued: http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidr...
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carbon20
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Posted: March 08 2012 at 5:53am |
Hi MSRA scary !!!!!!!!!!!!!! ,this is a drug resistant form of staph,my farther in law died of it, a few years ago. MRSA is a strain of the bacterium normally treated with common antibiotics in the penicillin family, such as methicillin. Antibiotic-resistant strains of the organism, however, have been turning up increasingly in places outside health-care settings. “If you get pneumonia with a MRSA staph organism, which we think is what happened here, and if it was transmitted to somebody else, that organism is almost impossible to treat with antibiotics,” he said.
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and the meek shall inherit the earth:and party!!
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Albert
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Posted: March 08 2012 at 6:40am |
"The Calvert County Department of Health (CCDH) said in a statement today that initial tests on two of the four family members suggest that the serious respiratory infection suffered by all four is a complication of seasonal flu. "
"Health officials so far haven't released any information on what type of staph infection the patients had."
They have not mentioned MRSA, but a staph infection as a complication to this flu. Now what type of flu can spark a staph infection that kills in less than 5 days? This is a real serious complication to this flu.
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Albert
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Posted: March 08 2012 at 7:08am |
Well since we know it's H3, there are only a few possibilities.
H3N2v, H3N1 or..... we know that the New England seal deaths last December was caused by a highly lethal strain of H3N8. Let's hope it didn't make the leap to humans.
Although, h3n2v is the frontrunner.
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