Posted on 07/12/2025 11:36:43 AM PDT by BenLurkin
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.
Coconino County Health and Human Services said testing results confirmed Friday that the patient died from pneumonic plague, described as “a severe lung infection caused by the Yersinia pestis bacterium.”
This marked the first recorded death from pneumonic plague in the county since 2007, when an individual had an interaction with a dead animal infected with the disease, according to county officials.
The most common forms of plague are bubonic, pneumonic, and septicemic. Pneumonic plague "develops when bacteria spread to the lungs of a patient with untreated bubonic or septicemic plague, or when a person inhales infectious droplets coughed out by another person or animal with pneumonic plague," according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
(Excerpt) Read more at nbcnews.com ...
Yeah. Ya probably DON’T want that! Everyone? Get your masks back on!
(NEVER AGAIN!)
I wonder if the patient is from another country.
It would be a good way to send biological weapons into America.
Author completely ignores the important aspect of what nationality this person was and from what country they came from? Just arrived? Legal or illegal?
In AZ, we have plague, Hanta virus and Valley fever. They all leave scars on your lungs.
Isn’t penicillilan or other anti-biotics effective against plague.
“I wonder if the patient is from another country”
Since the patient is “unidentified” it’s either an illegal or someone here caught it from an illegal.....more than likely the former.
“I wonder if the patient is from another country.”
It’s out here in the West. Prairie dogs carry it.
If treated early, yes
https://www.azcommerce.com/a/profiles/ViewProfile/4/Coconino+County/
in some ways this part of Arizona IS “another country.”
Wondering if the patient was from one of the nations or just got flea bit a while ago and didn’t think twice about the golfball -sized lymph nodes in his/her groin until it was too late.
I saw a grunt (11B) once while doing an internal medicine rotation at Ft. Ord back in the late 80’s who contracted YP/Bubonic Plague while walking around barefoot at Camp Roberts down by Paso Robles/Ft. Hunter Maggot (I say that with all due affection - I was stationed there once for a year, best time ever).
Thinking was he got a flea bite from one of the bizillions that inhabit the area catching a ride and feeding off the ground squirrels there. IIRC a little doxycycline took care of him and he was out of the hospital in a few days.
To think of how much time I spent hiking Los Padres Nat’l Forest, camping, hanging out at Lake San Antonio… the plague, while endemic, isn’t very prevalent nor often contracted. A quick websearch says there’s an average of SEVEN cases a year in the US, about the same number nearly 40 years ago.
The word “plague” can be used to describe any devastating epidemic or pestilence or sometimes a calamity that is not a disease.
The plague disease commonly referred to as bubonic plague or The Black Death (the one that killed perhaps 50% of Europe’s 14th century population) is caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis. That is the plague referenced in the article.
What has the hospital and or authorities done to do their best to stop widespread contamination of this plague? Have they asked for the person(s) who brought this individual to the hospital to quarantine along with any others who came in contact with him/her? As per recommendations that all infected are to be isolated from others?
Brought in from China. Like most bad things.
Import the Third World, become the Third World.
We Pure Bloods dodged it once and
That has left Permanent damage.
.
I’m in Yavapai county and
I Refuse to bye into any
Fear.
I know the prairie dogs and ground squirrels are vectors for bubonic plague. Are they a factor in pneumonic plague, as well?
Agreed. Good for you!
For the record, I was 11 Bravo - just jumped before we “humped”!
Yes, antibiotics cure bubonic plague.
This is why the cabal can never use it against us in a biological fashion.
Just like they did with “covid,” they can only use fear of the disease against us.
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