Greenlee County Health Department Director Steve Rutherford said in a news release dated Oct. 30 that the victim had recently been hospitalized with severe respiratory illness and died at a Tucson area hospital. Rutherford said patient confidentiality laws do not allow him to release the person’s name or where in Greenlee the person lived.
“This unfortunate death is the first to be reported for a Greenlee County resident (due) to the H1N1 virus,” Rutherford said. He said that the victim had pre-existing medical conditions that may have contributed to the severity of the illness.
Governors of at least two states in the eastern U.S. have declared states of emergency due to the swine flu. The vaccination has only recently become available in Greenlee, where clinics are being conducted by Gila Health Resources in Morenci and by the Greenlee Health Department.
Rutherford said the Health Department supports the Center for Disease Control recommendation that everyone 6 months or older be vaccinated. Clinics at Gila Health and the Health Department are targeting higher risk groups. That includes pregnant women, preschool children, school-age students and caregivers of infants less than 6 months old.
Rutherford said those with chronic medical conditions, such as lung, heart kidney and liver diseases, immune deficiencies and neurological illnesses should seek medical care if they become ill.
Morenci Schools is only now recovering from a flu outbreak that health officials strongly feel involved swine flu. Two weeks ago, Morenci Junior-Senior High School had 30 percent of its student population out with the flu. Fairbanks Elementary had about 25 percent of its students out. School officials are optimistic when they say the think they think the illness has peaked because far fewer students were been absent last week.
There have not been any reports of recent flu outbreaks at Clifton or Duncan.



Comments
3 comment(s)hmmm.. wrote on Nov 3, 2009 5:28 PM:
Barb wrote on Nov 3, 2009 10:20 AM:
Vaccine has been unavailable in Morenci for a couple of weeks, both H1N1 and seasonal. "
AKA Dora wrote on Nov 2, 2009 6:42 AM: