Josue Zurita was hospitalized Oct. 10 with an arm infection and died six days later. He was doing repair work to clean up the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey.
Dr. Philip Keiser with the Galveston County Health District said that bacteria likely entered a wound or a cut. He was working on repairing damaged homes when he got the infection, which is described as rare. It kills soft tissue.
“Everybody loved him,” said Brenda. “Everybody from the stores here in Galveston loved him.”
Zurita left his wife and daughter behind in Mexico more than 12 years ago to work as a carpenter in Texas.
But during Harvey’s floods, he was doing repair work when he was diagnosed with necrotizing fasciitis.
A 77-year-old woman also died from a flesh-eating bacteria infection after she fell into Hurricane Harvey’s floodwaters in her home.
Necrotizing fasciitis is a “serious bacterial skin infection that spreads quickly and kills the body’s soft tissue,” according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Texas state and local officials said that at least 80 people have died in Harvey, which slammed southern Texas in late August.