The defrocked warped primitive's a she.
A former registered nurse in Massachusetts, now banned from practicing in that profession for life.
She now lives in New Mexico; about 62 years old, give or take a year either way.
She has a face like Hindenburg's and a body like Mussolini's.
One of the most enthusiastic fans of abortion on Skins's island.
I was wondering where she lived--for a while I thought that she lived in Oregon, where Hantavirus is comparatively rare next to, say, the Four Corners region where I grew up. Same with bubonic plague--outside certain areas, it's unheard of, but for some strange reason, in the Southwest it's far more common.
I nadined the CDC website and found a breakdown by state, and a breakdown by year, but even CDC doesn't list cases until 1993, so the 1991 claim she makes is dubious, at best, and it certainly doesn't list exposure by year AND by state, so finding how many cases were diagnosed in NM in 1991 would be a bit, uh, impossible.
http://www.cdc.gov/hantavirus/surveillance/state-of-exposure.htmlIt's still a (relatively) rare disease, with only about 600 cases give or take in the last 20 years, but if one catches it, it's a very nasty thing, to be sure. I know when I was working out in remote areas in substations while working for SCE we definitely took precautions if we noticed dead rodents about (which was pretty often.)