A Washington state woman who repeatedly refused a judge’s orders to isolate or take medication for tuberculosis was taken into custody Thursday, more than three months after a rare civil arrest warrant was issued, officials said.

The woman, identified in court documents as V.N., was detained and booked into a “negative pressure” room at the Pierce County Jail, a spokesman for the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department said. 

The room is specially equipped for isolation, testing and treatment, the Tacoma-Pierce County Public Health Department said in a statement.

Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department, in Tacoma, Wash.
Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department, in Tacoma, Wash.Google Maps

The sheriff’s spokesman, Darren Moss Jr., said V.N. will not face criminal charges but has been ordered to remain at the jail for at least 45 days.

“Depending on her treatment she could leave early or stay later,” he said in an email.

Moss did not respond to questions about when the woman was taken into custody or where she was found.

“We are hopeful she will choose to get the life-saving treatment she needs to treat her tuberculosis,” the health department said in a statement that also thanked sheriff’s deputies “who supported public health with this necessary intervention.”

V.N.’s lawyer did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday evening.

The judge, Philip Sorenson, first ordered V.N.’s involuntary detention on Jan. 19, 2022, after finding that health officials had made “reasonable efforts” to obtain voluntary compliance with public health rules for tuberculosis, a communicable disease that is deadly, contagious and can spread through the air when people who have it cough or sneeze.

By February 2023, public health officials said they had gone to Sorenson 16 times and asked him to enforce his detention order with a contempt warrant, a move the department called “a last resort.” On Feb. 24, Sorenson signed the warrant.

According to a declaration from a corrections official that was filed with the court, authorities began surveilling V.N. in March to execute the warrant “in a safe manner.”

A deputy following V.N. watched her leave her home and board a city bus and go to a local casino, the official said. The deputy didn’t take her into custody and authorities have declined to say why.

On May 19, after V.N. failed to appear at a court hearing, Sorenson again found her in contempt and said the warrant remained in effect.

Nearly 100,000 cases of tuberculosis were recorded annually in the United States in the early 1950s. By 2021, that number had declined to 7,882, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Pierce County sees roughly 20 active cases of the disease annually, according to the local public health department.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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