Chicago Woman Dies Of Swine Flu After Giving Birth
June 4, 2009 by fluoutbreak
The new H1N1 swine flu virus claimed the life of a 20-year old Chicago woman on Saturday, one day after giving birth to a baby via Cesarean section at the city’s University of Illinois Medical Center, according to local news. The Chicago Sun Times reported that a spokeswoman for the hospital said that Caitlin Huber died of “complications from the swine flu and pneumonia”, after she was admitted on May 23 with flu-like symptoms.
Officials said Huber’s condition deteriorated quicky and her baby, a 27-week fetus was delivered by Caesarean on Friday. The baby is being cared for in the neonatal intensive care unit at the hospital, reported the Chicago Tribune.
Huber is reported to have had and “underlying medical condition”, as did three other people, two men and a woman, who have died in Chicago as a result of the swine flu.
According to the Tribune, the state health authorities said there are now 1,268 confirmed swine flu cases in Illinois. This means the state has around 8 per cent of the US total of 11,054 confirmed and probable cases reported yesterday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
52 states, including District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, have now reported confirmed cases of H1N1 swine flu.
Two other states have reported more cases than Illinois, Wisconsin’s total number of cases is now 1,905 and Texas is 1,405.
Apart from the 4 deaths in Illinois (only three of them appear in the CDC bulletin), Arizona and New York have also reported 4, Texas has reported 3, and Missouri, Utah and Washington have each reported 1, and there are media reports of a death in Michigan that has not yet appeared on the CDC list.




