Crow
Those are all good statistics. I have no arguments with any of them.
our healthcare workers have been through hell, right here on earth. Can you imagine the terror of walking into those patients rooms during the first 6 to 9 months of Covid? When we really knew nothing. Running out of protective gear, and having to reuse it. Watching patients die and not knowing why. Watching some of your friends get it who you work with, and die. And having to go into the next patient’s room, the very next day.
then, at the end of your shift, you get to go home and pollute your family. I know one mom who didn’t go home for three months, she was a nurse with kids.
Can you imagine being in environmental services during Covid, and your job is to somehow clean the hospital rooms. We now know it’s easy to kill Covid, at the beginning we had no idea. Do you remember the pictures of the Chinese military going down the street spraying anti-bacterial chemicals, in full protective gear?
Everyone has a different perspective.
Our healthcare workers have had it the worst. I can’t imagine what the PSTD is going to be like in a few years in that profession. My hat is off to everyone who helped take care of this, and are still doing so.
just this week I was meeting with caregivers in the Windy City. They are absolutely exhausted. For them it’s getting worse again.
Would we have better been better off Just exposing ourselves all at once, and letting the chips fall where they may? Who knows. We are where we are, what’s next?
I will gladly remove the word Florida from the top of my post. Let’s not debate Covid here. It’s a horrible disease, which we responded to horribly. It’s totally unprecedented. And it’s not over.
I’m fully vaccinated and I’m no longer afraid of it. I do believe if I had contracted Covid early before the vaccine, it would’ve been a bad scene for me.
mike