First Coronavirus Death Was Weeks Earlier Than Previously Thought
The first documented coronavirus fatalities in the US were on February 26 in Washington, but now authorities believe there was an earlier case. The New York Post explains that a 57-year-old San Jose woman who died on February 6 is now thought to be the first American to die from the virus.
The outlet explains, “Patricia Dowd, a manager for a semiconductor company, died suddenly after she had appeared to recover from flu-like symptoms. Her death was at first believed to be from a heart attack.” But now new revelations are surfacing. “This week, authorities told her family that she tested positive for COVID-19, making her the first confirmed fatality from the illness in the nation.” This means that the virus was circulating in that area far earlier than previously suspected.
Dowd’s family explains that she became “unusually sick” in late January with flu-like symptoms. Her brother-in-law adds that she traveled abroad “multiple times a year to different global locations.”