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Butler Co. PA: Suspected A/H1N1 death- Confirmed

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  • Butler Co. PA: Suspected A/H1N1 death- Confirmed

    Source: http://kdka.com/health/H1N1.death.in...2.1188348.html

    Sep 16, 2009 5:59 pm US/Eastern
    Health Department Probes Butler Co. Woman's Death
    BUTLER (KDKA) ―

    Deborah Spangler, 45, of Renfrew, died last week in the emergency room of Butler Memorial Hospital.

    The death of a Butler County woman is under investigation.

    Deborah Spangler, 45, of Renfrew, died last week in the emergency room of Butler Memorial Hospital.

    State health officials are investigating whether she died from the H1N1 virus.

    Dr. Bruce Dixon, of the Allegheny County Health Department, says it appears as if this case could be the first confirmed fatal case of H1N1 flu in the Pittsburgh area.

    "We were asked to do the laboratory work for this patient that apparently died of presumptive H1N1 flu," he said. "We don't have confirmation yet in the laboratory, but if you look at the only type of flu that's around today, it's 99 percent H1N1."

    Dixon says it's highly unusual for people to die of H1N1 flu alone and they normally have an underlying illness or infection.

    Spangler was active in local sports, coaching basketball, baseball and softball. She also managed three family-owned businesses.

    Spangler leaves behind a husband and two daughters.

  • #2
    Re: Butler Co. PA: Suspected A/H1N1 death

    Source: http://ydr.inyork.com/ci_13356810

    State probing possible swine flu death in W. Pa.
    The Associated Press
    Updated: 09/17/2009 08:58:19 AM EDT

    PITTSBURGH?Health Department officials are trying to determine if an otherwise healthy 45-year-old western Pennsylvania woman died of the swine flu.

    Forty-five-year-old Deborah Spangler, of Renfrew, Butler County, died Sept. 10 in the emergency room at Butler Memorial Hospital.

    The Allegheny County Health Department in Pittsburgh has been asked to do lab work to confirm the woman had swine flu. State health officials are also investigating.

    The state has confirmed more than 2,100 cases of swine flu and 10 deaths caused by it, but none yet in the greater Pittsburgh region.

    ???

    Information from: Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, http://pghtrib.com

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    • #3
      Re: Butler Co. PA: Suspected A/H1N1 death- Confirmed

      Source: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09268/1000649-54.stm

      Butler County death confirmed as swine flu
      Friday, September 25, 2009
      Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

      The state Health Department has confirmed that cultures from a Butler County resident who died of flu-like symptoms were positive for the novel H1N1 virus also known as swine flu.

      The state did not identify the victim, but former Allegheny County coroner Dr. Cyril H. Wecht confirmed she was Deborah Spangler, 45, of Renfrew, who died Sept. 10. Dr. Wecht performed a private autopsy on her and sent the cultures off for testing.

      She is the second Pittsburgh-area swine flu fatality. Earlier this week, the state Health Department said a 27-year-old Allegheny County man had died several weeks ago. He was not identified.

      Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09268...#ixzz0S7bZ0BFJ

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      • #4
        Re: Butler Co. PA: Suspected A/H1N1 death- Confirmed

        Source: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09273/1001978-100.stm

        Swine flu, with bacterial infection, killed Renfrew woman
        Wednesday, September 30, 2009
        By Pohla Smith, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

        The official cause of death of 45-year-old Deborah Spangler of Renfrew, Butler County, on Sept. 10 was the H1N1 virus with complications of a bacterial infection, former Allegheny County coroner Dr. Cyril Wecht said today.

        Dr. Wecht, who did a private autopsy at the request of the family, talked about Mrs. Spangler's death during a joint news briefing with Allegheny County Health Department Director Bruce Dixon about various aspects of H1N1, also known as swine flu.

        "This is a 45-year-old woman in perfectly good health. And that is the significance of this case -- that a healthy person with no predisposing conditions such as a chronic respiratory problem, a heart problem, or a woman who was pregnant . . . that this can occur and can lead to death," Dr. Wecht said.

        Dr. Wecht said that there has been a degree of avoiding the Spangler family in their home town, a reaction that is "unfair" and has no scientific basis.


        He said Mrs. Spangler's widower and two grown child have not contracted H1N1.
        More details in tomorrow's Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

        Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09273...#ixzz0ScgZnoHE

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