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A healthy woman suddenly died. She was the first known coronavirus-related fatality in the U.S.

Santa Clara County Public Health Department Director Dr. Sara Cody
Santa Clara County Public Health Department Director Dr. Sara Cody.
(Anda Chu / Bay Area News Group)
Los Angeles Times reporter Paige St. John

A mystery clouded the death of Patricia Dowd in early February.

The San Jose woman was a seemingly healthy 57-year-old who exercised routinely, watched her diet and took no medication. She had flu-like symptoms for a few days, then appeared to recover, a family member said. Then she was found dead Feb. 6, and the initial culprit appeared to be a heart attack.

This week, authorities confirmed to Dowd’s family that she tested positive for the novel coronavirus, making her the first such documented fatality in the nation.

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Health authorities in Santa Clara County did not identify Dowd by name, describing the decedent as a 57-year-old woman who died at home. The Times independently confirmed her death from family members.

Santa Clara County Health Officer Dr. Sara Cody said thedeaths of three people in the county — one Feb. 6, another Feb. 17, and a third March 6 — were evidence that the novel coronavirus arrived in the Bay Area far earlier than expected and spread. Previously, the first documented fatality was outside Seattle on Feb. 29.

“None of these cases had a significant travel history,” Cody said Wednesday of the three deaths. “We presume that each of them represent community transmission and that there was some significant level of virus circulating in our community in early February ... and who knows how much earlier.”

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BOYLE HEIGHTS, CA - APRIL 29: AltaMed Health Services staff swabs a patient during COVID-19 testing on Wednesday, April 29, 2020 in Boyle Heights, CA. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

A study shows roughly 4% of L.A. County residents have contracted COVID-19, suggesting it might be less fatal locally than originally believed.

Cody referred to the cases as “iceberg tips,” an omen of a vast and unseen propagation. The person who died on Feb. 17 was a 69-year-old man. The March 6 victim was a 70-year-old man.

Cody said the robust influenza season this winter, coupled with limited testing and a nascent understanding of the coronavirus, led to this late detection.

“It would be difficult to pick out what was influenza and what was COVID-19,” Cody said. She credited the county’s medical examiner and health officials for taking the time to understand the virus and help detect these three deaths.

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HOLLYWOOD, CA -- TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 2020: A pedestrian wears a protective mask to help protect from contracting Coronavirus along a mostly empty Hollywood Blvd. sidewalk and closed businesses in Hollywood, CA, on April 21, 2020. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Los Angeles County health officials announced 66 more coronavirus-linked deaths Wednesday, bringing the fatality toll to 729 since the outbreak began.

Family members said Dowd, who worked as manager for semiconductor company, became unusually sick in late January and was forced to cancel plans to go to a weekend funeral.

After a bout with flu-like symptoms, however, she had improved and was working from home, corresponding with a colleague at about 8 a.m. the day of her death.

About two hours later, her daughter found her dead. As family members learned more about the symptoms of the coronavirus, suspicions grew.

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Dowd had a history of foreign travel, as did her co-workers at Lam Research in the Bay Area.

Her brother-in-law, Jeff Macias, said Dowd had planned to travel to China later this year and went abroad “multiple times a year to different global locations.”

“Where did this come from if it wasn’t her traveling?” Macias said. “Patricia may not be the first. It’s just the earliest we have found so far.”

He added: “Let’s keep looking so we know the extent of it -- that’s the greater good, for everyone else and my family included.”

Her elder brother, Rick Cabello, agreed that his sister’s death was a shock.

Cabello said his sister was hardworking, loyal and caring. Her only daughter had just graduated college. Dowd had a network of friends that dated to her childhood and her time at St. Francis High School in Mountain View, where the siblings grew up.

“She was living the life she deserved,” Cabello said.

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Matt Hamilton is a reporter for the Los Angeles Times. He won the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting with colleagues Harriet Ryan and Paul Pringle and was part of the team of reporters that won a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage of the San Bernardino terrorist attack. A graduate of Boston College and the University of Southern California, he joined The Times in 2013.

Paige St. John covers criminal justice, disasters and investigative stories for the Los Angeles Times from Northern California.

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