Saint Thomas ICU nurse dies from COVID-19, With no pre-existing health conditions.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WTVF) — A Saint Thomas ICU nurse has died from COVID-19.

Gary Woodward was the ICU team leader at Ascension Saint Thomas West Hospital. With no pre-existing health conditions, Woodward's time in critical care and on a ventilator for the virus was his first time as an overnight patient, according to his family.

https://www.newschannel5.com/news/st-thomas-icu-nurse-dies-from-covid-19
 

What makes you think that he had pneumonia in the past? I didn't see that in the linked report or its source article.

BTW, he and his wife just celebrated their 45th anniversary. He was 64 according to the obituary.
https://www.radio.com/news/nurse-dies-from-covid-19-at-same-hospital-where-he-worked
Why so touchy, Star?

Did you miss my point and the wording in my reply quote to Robert, "one possibility"?

I didn't affirmatively state that Mr. Woodward, had pneumonia, I simply suggested that he may have had an underlying health issue outside that of typical health woes among older people, hence my wording, "one possibility".

Possibility: a thing that may happen or be the case, the state or fact of being likely or possible.
 
Why so touchy, Star?

Did you miss my point and the wording in my reply quote to Robert, "one possibility"?

I didn't affirmatively state that Mr. Woodward, had pneumonia, I simply suggested that he may have had an underlying health issue outside that of typical health woes among older people, hence my wording, "one possibility".

Possibility: a thing that may happen or be the case, the state or fact of being likely or possible.
Sorry, I must have misunderstood your original meaning.

I though you were saying that he had, in fact, previously had pneumonia and his severe Covid illness could have been due to lung damage from that pneumonia.

I didn't realize that you were speculating that maybe sometime earlier in his life he might have had pneumonia and that it might possibly have affected him with Covid.

I wasn't being touchy, was just trying to keep the facts straight and learn. (I had pneumonia some years back and hadn't previously heard that it could be an underlying condition making one more susceptible to severe Covid. You could see how, if true, this would be concerning to me.)
 
Sorry, I must have misunderstood your original meaning.

I though you were saying that he had, in fact, previously had pneumonia and his severe Covid illness could have been due to lung damage from that pneumonia.

I didn't realize that you were speculating that maybe sometime earlier in his life he might have had pneumonia and that it might possibly have affected him with Covid.

I wasn't being touchy, was just trying to keep the facts straight and learn. (I had pneumonia some years back and hadn't previously heard that it could be an underlying condition making one more susceptible to severe Covid. You could see how, if true, this would be concerning to me.)
No apology necessary.

It's my understanding that each bought of pneumonia permanently damages a persons lungs by 25%, and by age 20-25, our lungs have matured, however, after around the age of 35, it is normal for ones lung function to decline gradually with age.

Turning back the hands of time for a moment, as a young child I don't ever recall feeling like I went through bouts where I struggled to breathe whenever I'd get sick with a common cold and stuffed-up, but over the past 10 years there have been times where I have awoken in the middle of the night in a panic, because I just wasn't getting the oxygen needed, so while I have never suffered a case of pneumonia, it just goes to show how even perfectly healthy people with full lung function could struggle to breathe when stricken with the Covid virus.
 


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