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  • Arizona DHS H1N1 Case Numbers

    Arizona Department of Health Services
    Office of Infectious Disease Services
    2009 Influenza A (H1N1) Virus Update
    May 19, 2009
    Updated as of 5/19/2009 11:00 am
    Summary of Case and Epidemiologic Information
    Arizona
    Cases
    Confirmed
    ARIZONA
    406
    Apache
    1
    Cochise
    1
    Coconino
    Gila
    Graham
    Greenlee
    La Paz
    1
    Maricopa
    223

    Mohave
    1
    Navajo
    Pima
    87

    Pinal
    60
    Santa Cruz
    5
    Yavapai
    1
    Yuma
    26
    Confirmed
    Age:
    Children (less than 18 years)
    285 (70&#37
    Adults (18 or older)
    119 (29%)
    Gender:
    Female (number & percent)
    182 (45%)
    Male (number & percent)
    188 (46%)
    National (http://www.cdc.gov/swineflu/) updated 5/19/2009, 11:00am EST
    Total US Cases: 5469 cases; 6 Deaths
    International (http://www.who.int/csr/don/2009_05_14/en/index.html) updated 5/19/2009, 06:00 GMT
    WHO Total: 9830; 79 Deaths


    Pima County Health Department H1N1 Updates:

    May 19, 2009 2:33 p.m. - Pima County’s confirmed case count is holding at 76
    for the State, the confirmed case count is 328…70% of the confirmed cases occurred in children less than 18 years old…the second death in Arizona occurred in an individual residing on the Gila River Indian Reservation in Pinal county…to date there have been no deaths from the H1N1 Influenza in Pima County.
    Please, keep the sick ones out of circulation for 10-12 days from first symptoms. Reduce the spread, Reduce the shedding, Reduce the Mortality. Please keep reporting the numbers AND it would be very nice to know what counties the deaths are happening in!

  • #2
    57-year-old woman is Arizona?s second swine flu death

    info on 2nd

    link

    Phoenix, ARIZONA (BNO NEWS) ? A 57-year-old woman became Arizona?s second swine flu death last week, officials said on Tuesday afternoon.

    ?It was a 57-year-old female from Pinal County, Arizona,? said Alia Maisonet, who is a spokeswoman for the Gila River Indian Reservation. The woman, who?s identity is not being released, was admitted to a hospital outside the reservation after she complained of flu-like symptoms.

    Shortly after her hospitalization last week, the woman passed away and tests later confirmed she did in fact have swine flu at the time of her death. Officials refused to provide details on the exact day she died but did say the woman had a pre-existing medical condition. ?She had a compromised immune system,? the spokeswoman said. ?Confirming whether or not she actually passed away from H1N1 flu is hard to tell because of the pre-existing medical condition.?

    The Arizona Department of Health Services and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) also confirmed that a second person with swine flu had passed away. Both had no additional information on the case.

    On May 14, a woman suffering from a lung condition and swine flu became the first Arizona citizen to die in relation to the disease that killed dozens in mainly Mexico and the United States.

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