A survivor of Seattle-area nursing home outbreak heads home
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[March 27, 2020]
By Tim Reid
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - 81-year-old Judie
Shape tested positive for coronavirus just days after checking into the
Life Care nursing home near Seattle, where three dozen people have died
in one of the earliest and deadliest U.S. outbreaks.
On Thursday, she went home.
Shape was featured in a previous Reuters story and photo essay
chronicling the nightmare endured by residents, staff and families at
the home. (For full story, click https://reut.rs/2Jkqv0h )
She recovered despite serious underlying health problems, including a
stomach infection and recent blood clot surgery. Such conditions make
the disease particularly dangerous for the elderly.
"She's a survivor," said her daughter, Lori Spencer.
Shape was admitted to Life Care Center on Feb. 26, for rehabilitation
after her surgery. Three days later, when the facility confirmed its
first positive coronavirus test, Shape was essentially trapped there
because no other facility would accept patients that had been exposed to
outbreak at the Kirkland, Washington nursing home.
Shape was first tested for coronavirus on March 8, with a positive
result coming back two days later. She was again tested on Tuesday and
Thursday, because she has been symptom-free for nearly two weeks.
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Lori Spencer and her mother, Judie Shape, 81, who had been diagnosed
with coronavirus disease (COVID-19) and was a resident at Life Care
Center of Kirkland, the long-term care facility linked to confirmed
coronavirus cases in the state, lay a wreath at the entrance to the
center upon leaving for Spencer's home, in Kirkland, Washington,
U.S. March 26, 2020. REUTERS/David Ryder
Although the results have yet to come back, Spencer decided Shape
was strong enough to leave. The daughter, like other family members
with relatives at the home, had been barred from visiting her mother
for safety reasons. She often comforted Shape by standing outside
the window of her room - able to see her, but not touch her - as the
two women talked on the phone.
"I went to the window yesterday, she looked really good, really
bored, and like a caged tiger," Spencer told Reuters in an
interview. "It was time to take her home. And man, it's nice to have
her home."
(Reporting by Tim Reid; Editing by Brian Thevenot)
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