Relatives grieve for pregnant Texas woman with swine flu who died

May 6th, 2009

Associated Press writers Alicia A. Caldwell in El Paso and Jamie Stengle in Dallas contributed to this report.


HARLINGEN, Texas — This week should have been a joyous time for Judy Trunnell, a 33-year-old teacher who had just given birth to a healthy baby girl. But the friends and relatives whose cars lined the quiet street in front of her home in a quiet subdivision Tuesday instead were mourning her, the first American citizen with swine flu to die. Trunnell died after being hospitalized for two weeks. She slipped into a coma, and her baby was delivered by Cesarean section, said a cousin, Mario Zamora.

“There are a number of health conditions that put people in a higher risk group where they are more likely to develop serious complications should they get any type of influenza,” McBride said. “Pregnancy is not a chronic condition.” Trunnell died early Tuesday after being hospitalized since April 19, said Leonel Lopez, Cameron County epidemiologist. She was extremely ill when she was hospitalized, said Dr. Joseph McCormick, regional dean of the University of Texas School of Public Health’s Brownsville campus.

Trunnell taught in the Mercedes Independent School District about 15 miles west of her hometown of Harlingen, a city of about 63,000 near the U.S.-Mexico border. Mercedes school Superintendent Walter Watson said he was told early Tuesday that Trunnell died after being taken off life support. “It brings tears to my eyes to my eyes to know she won’t be with our children or hers,” he said. “You just don’t replace people like that,” Watson said.

Trunnell was first seen by a physician April 14. Doctors knew she had flu but did not know what kind, Lopez said. The area is undergoing a Type A influenza epidemic and swine flu is one variety of that, he said. She was confirmed to have swine flu shortly before she died, he said.

U.S. health officials on Tuesday withdrew their recommendation that schools with suspected swine flu cases shut down for two weeks. Mercedes school district officials said the district would close its schools until Monday. The only other swine flu death in the U.S. was that of a Mexico City toddler who also had other health problems and had been visiting relatives in Brownsville, near Harlingen. He died last week at a Houston children’s hospital.

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