The patient was recently treated at an emergency department in Flagstaff and died the same day, Northern Arizona Healthcare said.
A person in northern Arizona has died from a case of pneumonic plague, local health officials said.
The unidentified patient, from Coconino County, showed up to the Flagstaff Medical Center Emergency Department and died there the same day, Northern Arizona Healthcare said in a statement. It is unclear when the death occurred.
The hospital noted that "appropriate initial management" and "attempts to provide life-saving resuscitation" was performed, but "the patient did not recover."
Rapid diagnostic testing led to a presumptive diagnosis of Yersinia pestis.
Between one and two thousand cases of the plague are reported globally every year. Being in Arizona, they may have gotten it from being in contact with black-tailed prairie dogs.
Well thats good at least, another commenter mentioned this guy must have been sitting on it for weeks to die the same day he got admitted. We can breathe for a few more weeks.
Plague is pretty easily treated with antibiotics if caught in time. The fact this dude died the same day as he went to the hospital, I’d wager he waited too long to seek medical treatment.
Why didn't they seek help at the onset of the illness? They wait for the miraculous cure from modern medicine.
Just like that old man that died from rabies.
Pneumonic plague is a particularly aggressive form of the plague, where you basically need to be treated within the first 24 hours of showing symptoms in order to have much chance of surviving, and you can die in as little as a day and a half. Initial symptoms include fever, weakness, nausea and headaches, aka the same symptoms as probably >90% of the illnesses most of us contract, so I can see how it would be easy to underestimate the severity of it, until you start coughing up blood.
Further, while I don't know this person's circumstances, in a country where there's no guarantee of either universal healthcare or paid sick time and protections for workers who call off work when ill, I can easily see how someone might say "Eh, it's just a cold, but I'll tough it out, because I can't afford to go to the doctor and/or miss work," when they notice some of the milder and less remarkable symptoms, then wake up the next day coughing up blood and already be screwed.