St. Lucie County man, 23, killed by swine flu suffered from asthma
September 4th, 2009 by TCPalm.comST. LUCIE COUNTY — St. Lucie County Health Department officials confirmed Thursday the county’s first death from H1N1 flu, commonly called the swine flu.
Jason Christopher Schenck, 23, of Port St. Lucie, died Tuesday at St. Lucie Medical Center from the H1N1 virus, his family said.
“He had more friends than I knew he had, and he was just a good kid. He was a good all around kid. He was very polite,” father Clifford Schenck said. “They’re (Jason’s friends) calling me and telling me that Jason was the only one they could talk to and they know he would listen.”
Schenck suffered from asthma his entire life, Clifford Schenck said. And that condition along with several bouts of pneumonia left scars on the young man’s lungs and made him susceptible to the virus, his father said.
Clifford Schenck said his son, who had been in the hospital since Aug. 15, became ill after attending a concert with friends in West Palm Beach. None of his friends have reported feeling sick, his father said.
“When we took him in on the 15th, when he got admitted, his fingers were turning purple and his toes from lack of oxygen,” Clifford Schenck said. “I don’t care if you’re 23 or 70 years old, you don’t need to go out with this because it eats you up.”
The public shouldn’t panic with the county’s first death from the swine flu but practice good hygiene skills, said Arlease Hall, St. Lucie County Health Department spokeswoman.
“It’s imperative that if you sneeze or cough, to do so in your sleeve and not in your hands,” she said. “Wash your hands, and if you are sick, please, just stay home.”
Known as swine flu, H1N1 is a unique strain of the influenza virus that emerged this spring first in Mexico and now is widespread throughout the United States.
“I can tell you, if someone has flu symptoms, it is almost certainly H1N1,” said Karlette Peck, epidemiologist for the St. Lucie County Health Department.
Symptoms include fever, chills, aches, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and fatigue.
People most at-risk: pregnant women, infants and children and those with chronic health conditions, including morbid obesity.
People born before 1957 seem to have some immunity to the H1N1 strain.
Like any flu virus, H1N1 is spread person-to-person through droplets.
Staff writer Hillary Copsey and WPTV contributed to this report.
By Keona Gardner, TCPalm.com
Tags: beach, children, death, dies, emergency, father, hand, Health, hospital, ill, illness, infant, kids, man, medical, nausea, purple, sick, spring, swine

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September 4th, 2009 at 9:56 am
My sympathies go out to this family. I’m very sorry that this happened to you.
But now the policies of the Obama administration are endangering many more to H1N1. For example, today the Gainesville Sun reported that a high school football team has several players who have come down with Swine Flu this week. Other’s undoubtedly also have it even thought the symptoms haven’t manifested yet. So what are they going to do? They’re going to play a contact sport against another school and spread H1N1 to another large community… and people WILL die. And who sets this policy? It’s set by the Dept. of Education, or in other words, Obama.
What they SHOULD be doing is to either reschedule the game until after everyone’s had their H1N1 shots or they should cancel it all together. Imagine, letting people die for a football game… thanks to that magnificent intellect of the Obama administration.
September 4th, 2009 at 10:28 am
Jack -
Grow-up and stop the blame-game…..
September 4th, 2009 at 10:31 am
My goodness, can’t you just leave sympathy for the family who just lost a child who was just beginning life and leave your politics out of it? Disgusting
September 4th, 2009 at 10:52 am
@ Jack
Unbelievable. There are plenty of other articles and forums to voice your opinion about the current administration. This article is not one of them. Get a life…
My deepest condolences to the Schenck family. Jason sounded like a good man.
September 4th, 2009 at 1:08 pm
Jack - No presidential administration sets local school board policy, if you have a problem contact yur local authorities.
My sympathies to the family for their loss. I have asthmatics in my home and am very concerned. My heart goes out to them for the ordeal thay had to endure.