05/14/2021 21:36
Clarín.com
Society
Updated 05/14/2021 10:02 PM
Sol Casella was just 23 years old and became one more victim of the coronavirus pandemic.
She was a journalist, working as an editor at the news agency of the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Lomas de Zamora, where she also studied, and her death caused a commotion in that university, where she is remembered as "
a young, committed journalist and cheerful
".
From the young woman's environment they explained that on April 18 they detected the coronavirus and four days later she was admitted to the Sagrado Corazón de la Ciudad clinic, with bilateral pneumonia.
"Seven days later the virus was gone but he had respiratory sequelae. On May 1 he entered intensive care and was in a pharmacological coma,"
Sol's sister,
Clarín
,
told
Clarín
.
The young journalist died this Friday.
"The lungs couldn't hold it any longer," his sister explained.
As he specified, Sol had no previous pathologies and died of
the sequelae left by the virus
in his lungs.
Thank you all from the heart my daughter SOL loves writing and loves her career .. Sol was everything for me that I am the mother as well as for the sisters .. Thank you
- Claudia Cabrera (@ claucabrera13) May 14, 2021
Sol was studying Journalism at the University of Lomas de Zamora.
He had a few subjects left to graduate.
On May 23, he was going to turn 24 years old.
"We regret to inform the death of Sol, a student of @SocialesUNLZ and editor of @AgenciaAUNO. The UNLZ Community accompanies their family and friends at this difficult time," the university published on its social networks.
Among the messages that accompanied that publication is that of his mother, who recalled that Sol
loved to write
and also his career as a journalist.
"Thank you all from the heart my daughter SOL loves writing and loves her career .. Sol was everything for me that I am the mother as well as for the sisters .. Thank you", wrote Claudia, who also shared other messages from her daughter's friends.
I write a lot about #coronavirus, but the best news on Sunday is for me, this time: having my grandmother and grandfather vaccinated with the first dose against the virus after 13 months of uncertainty, is a huge step.
# VacunaCOVID19 # Covid_19 #vacunatePBA pic.twitter.com/G6a22d1jWA
- Sol Casella (@SolCasella) April 4, 2021
Almost like an irony of fate, the young woman's last publication on Twitter is from April 4 last and there she tells excitedly that her grandparents
had been vaccinated
against the coronavirus.
"I write a lot about #coronavirus, but the best news on Sunday is for me, this time: having my grandmother and grandfather vaccinated with the first dose against the virus after 13 months of uncertainty, it is a huge step," he said.
From the AUNO agency, where Sol worked, they defined her as "a young, committed, cheerful journalist."
Other colleagues from the faculty described her as "communicative, restless and a good companion."
LM
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