Skip to content
  • Essence GU
  • Beautycon
  • NaturallyCurly
  • Afropunk
  • Essence Studios
  • Soko Mrkt
  • Ese Funds
  • Refinery29
  • 2025 ESSENCE Festival Of Culture
  • Celebrity
  • Fashion
  • Beauty
  • Lifestyle
  • Entrepreneurship
  • News
  • Shopping
  • Video
  • Events
  • Subscribe
Home

California Had 2 Coronavirus Deaths Before First Reported U.S. Death

Two residents of Santa Clara County, California died of the coronavirus weeks before the first reported deaths in the Seattle area.
California Had 2 Coronavirus Deaths Before First Reported U.S. Death
Leonard Ortiz/MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images
By Breanna Edwards · Updated November 4, 2020

Two Californians from Santa Clara County died of the novel coronavirus some weeks to a week before the first known victims were actually reported in the United States, officials confirmed on Tuesday.

According to the New York Times, autopsies of the two Santa Clara County residents who died in their homes on February 6 and February 17, confirmed that they were infected with the deadly virus. This would place the latest of the two deaths more than 10 days before the first known coronavirus-related death was reported in the Seattle area on February 29. Officials later reported that two people who died February 26 had also been infected.

“Each one of those deaths is probably the tip of an iceberg of unknown size,” Dr. Sara Cody, Santa Clara County’s chief medical officer told The Times. “It feels quite significant.”

Experimental Coronavirus Vaccine Proves Promising For First People Tested
MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA – APRIL 3: Stanford medical student Sedona Murphy places a blood sample into a holder during a coronavirus antibody study at Mountain View’s First Presbyterian Church in Mountain View, Calif., on Friday, April 3, 2020. Murphy along with fellow students, faculty, and volunteers will be taking blood samples from 2500 pre-registered participants at three sites for a public health research study. (Photo by Ray Chavez/MediaNews Group/The Mercury News via Getty Images)

It is currently presumed that the two Californians who died were infected via community spread as they had no known travel histories, according to Dr. Cody. This also suggests that the virus could have been spreading in California much earlier than previously believed.

“It was probably around unrecognized for quite some time,” Dr. Jeffrey V. Smith, the Santa Clara County executive added.

This also re-emphasizes the issues that the United States has faced due to a lack of widespread testing and with the restrictions on who could be tested.

“We had to ask the CDC every single time: Does this person meet the case definition? May we send a sample?” Dr. Cody said. “We had this very, very uncomfortable feeling that we were hearing about a lot of patients who really felt that they were cases but we couldn’t test.”

–

ESSENCE is committed to bringing our audience the latest facts about COVID-19 (coronavirus). Our content team is closely monitoring the developing details surrounding the virus via official sources and health care experts, including the World Health Organization (WHO), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). Please continue to refresh ESSENCE’s informational hub for updates on COVID-19, as well as for tips on taking care of yourselves, your families and your communities.

TOPICS:  California coronavirus coronavirus death COVID-19 Santa Clara Santa Clara County