Illinois county to probe earlier deaths from heart
attacks, pneumonia for COVID-19
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[May 06, 2020]
(Reuters) - Health officials in the U.S.
state of Illinois' Cook County, which includes the city of Chicago, will
probe deaths involving heart attacks and pneumonia for indications of
COVID-19 as far back as November, a county spokeswoman said on
Wednesday.
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Chicago recorded its first death from the coronavirus on March 16
but the medical examiner's office from Cook County is planning to
review case records from earlier deaths for COVID-19 signs, Cook
County spokeswoman Natalia Derevyanny told Reuters in an emailed
statement.
"The Medical Examiner's Office will review pneumonia and heart
attack deaths that fell under our jurisdiction as of November 2019",
the spokeswoman said.
"While we have not seen specific indications of COVID-19 deaths in
Cook County before mid-March, we want to ensure that we have a full
picture of when this virus entered our community and its true
impact".
Health officials have said that the novel coronavirus circulated in
the United States weeks earlier than thought and was mistaken for
flu.
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The virus emerged in California in January and a 57-year-old woman died of
COVID-19 on Feb. 6, far earlier than any other reported cases in the United
States.
It was previously thought that the first U.S. death from COVID-19 was in
Washington state on Feb. 29.
The coronavirus has infected about 1.2 million people in the United States and
caused about 71,000 deaths, as of late Tuesday.
The global death toll from the outbreak stands at over 255,000 with more than
3.6 million infections.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru; editing by Nick Macfie)
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