Oregon Man, Believed to Be One of the Oldest Coronavirus Survivors in the World, Turns 104
Bill Lapschies is a survivor.
The Oregonian, born in 1916, has survived the 1918 flu pandemic, World War II and now, the novel coronavirus (COVID-19).
Lapschies celebrated his 104th birthday on Wednesday, 19 days after he had a fever and more than 25 days after first showing symptoms of the contagious respiratory virus, Oregon Public Broadcasting reported .
Lapschies lives at the Edward C. Allworth Veterans’ Home in Lebanon, Oregon, which is about 80 miles south of Portland.
“This could have easily gone another way,” Lapschies’ physician, Dr. Rob Richardson, told OPB. “There’s not a lot of interventions that can be done.”
Richardson explained that the veteran did not develop the severe respiratory issues that would have put him on a ventilator if at a hospital, where he would have been treated if he didn’t already live in a long-term care facility.
“I don’t know,” Lapschies answered his granddaughter Jamie Yutzie when she asked how he survived COVID-19. “It just went away. Sit out here and you can get rid of anything.”
“Pretty good,” Lapschies said when asked how it felt to be 104, according to OPB. “I made it.”
According to Richardson, Lapschies was put into isolation on March 5 after exhibiting his first symptoms. Three days later, Richardson told OPB, there were several residents at the veteran’s home were showing signs of a respiratory illness, and others were also put into isolation.
Now, “he is fully recovered ,” Lapschies’ daughter Carolee Brown told The Oregonian . “He is very perky. And he is very excited.”
There are at least 690 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Oregon, with 18 deaths related to the virus. Nationwide, there are at least 206,233 confirmed cases and 4,576 deaths.
Gotta love it.
What an amazing story. This man is made of stuff that is no longer around.
Wow, ya never know.