FAIRMONT, MINN. – Eugene Borchardt hadn't traveled anywhere exotic in the last weeks of his life. The healthy 88-year-old waved to neighbors while taking his daily walks outside or in the local mall. He drank coffee with friends at restaurants in town. He went to the grocery store and to church and honored fellow military veterans at funerals, as he always had.
His family isn't sure exactly where he picked up the insidious novel coronavirus in a farming county of fewer than 20,000 residents.
Friday, on the eighth day of his hospitalization, Borchardt became Martin County's second COVID-19 fatality, underscoring the harsh reality that the global pandemic can quickly infiltrate and spread even in remote communities that often feel insulated from such worldly threats.
As of Monday, according to state health reports, two county residents had died from the virus out of 23 who had tested positive — including nine from a local church congregation, according to the pastor — making the small county an unexpected hotbed for the illness.
"It's probably a good assumption that it's been here for a while," said Chera Sevcik, community health administrator for Martin and Faribault counties. "I think people are scared. People are looking for an understanding of why our numbers are much higher than everybody else's in rural Minnesota."
State health officials haven't been able to determine how the virus entered this county on the Iowa border, where the Fairmont water tower sticks out on the prairie horizon. The first people with symptoms in the county in mid-March hadn't traveled and were classified as community transmission cases, according to the state Department of Health.
Official case numbers may be higher there because the local hospital is part of the Mayo Clinic system, which has its own testing capabilities. But the numbers stand out in contrast to other rural counties in Minnesota and surrounding states, leaving no doubt among residents that the virus is in their midst.
County and city leaders are doing their best to release all the information they can on each case, Sevcik said, while sending a united message urging people to stay calm and stay home to slow the community spread.