COVID-19: Kendal resident with COVID-19 dies
Modified: 2/5/2021 9:50:46 PM
HANOVER A resident of Kendal at Hanover died this week after testing positive for COVID-19, according to a spokesman for the senior living community.
The resident, who had tested positive last month, also had other health conditions, Kendal spokesman Jeff Roosevelt said in an email.
An obituary in Friday’s
Valley News said Betty Breunig, who had moved to Kendal in 1996, died of complications from COVID-19 on Tuesday at age 93.
The community, which is located off of Lyme Road, had no active cases as of Friday, Roosevelt said.
The outbreak at Kendal has included a total of four residents and seven workers, according to a Thursday update from the New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services.
COVID-19: Kendal at Hanover sees cases in residents
Modified: 1/14/2021 10:59:59 PM
UNITY An outbreak at Sullivan County nursing home in Unity has grown to include 35 people, including 21 residents and 14 employees, said Ted Purdy, the facility’s administrator, in an email. Five employees have recovered and returned to work, he said. Elsewhere in the Upper Valley, Kendal at Hanover now has an outbreak.
Kendal’s outbreak includes three residents, Kendal spokesman Jeff Roosevelt said in an email Thursday. He also said there was one new case in an employee in addition to the four he described earlier in the week.
Kendal, which is on Lyme Road north of downtown Hanover, was one of 11 long-term care facilities that state officials on Thursday added to the list of facilities with ongoing outbreaks.
COVID-19: More cases found at Sullivan County, Hanover nursing homes
Modified: 1/12/2021 9:56:45 PM
UNITY COVID-19 cases at senior living facilities in the Upper Valley continue to climb.
An outbreak at Sullivan County Health Care in Unity has grown to include 20 people, according to Ted Purdy, the nursing home’s administrator. Since Jan. 5, 11 residents and nine workers have tested positive for the virus, Purdy said in an email. Additional testing of both residents and workers took place on Tuesday, he said.
Residents’ symptoms have ranged from none to coughs, nausea and elevated temperatures, Purdy said.
Four employees of Kendal at Hanover have recently tested positive for the virus, spokesman Jeff Roosevelt said in an email. Two Kendal employees also tested positive in September. So far, no residents at the facility off Lyme Road have tested positive, Roosevelt said.