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COVID long-hauler wants to reach out to anti-vaxxers

Sarah Mitchell never gasped for air while hiking the rugged West Coast Trail or while plunging into the ocean off Willows Beach in January, but since contracting COVID-19, she has to use an inhaler just to climb the stairs.
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Sarah Mitchell, a communications officer for the sa国际传媒 government and a freelance writer, tested positive for COVID-19 in April and is still recovering. She wishes her experience with the deadly and highly infectious virus could enlighten the anti-vaccination protesters who swarmed sa国际传媒聮s legislature and hospitals in Nanaimo, Duncan and Vancouver this week. DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST

Sarah Mitchell never gasped for air while hiking the rugged West Coast Trail or while plunging into the ocean off Willows Beach in January, but since contracting COVID-19, she has to use an inhaler just to climb the stairs.

鈥淚鈥檓 a 27-year-old woman with the lung trauma of a 60-year-old smoker,鈥 the Saanich woman said.

Mitchell, a communications officer for the sa国际传媒 government and a freelance writer, tested positive for COVID on April 19, after her fiance, Louis Dillon, fell ill. Contact tracers weren鈥檛 able to find the source of transmission.

鈥淲e just got really unlucky,鈥 she said.

On the worst days, she was bedridden with fatigue and was breathless.

鈥淚 thought I might die.鈥

Her case was regarded as moderate by medical professionals, and she was never hospitalized. But she and Dillon felt the cold slap of mortality. 鈥淚 was scared.鈥 Dillon has since returned to work, but Mitchell has not.

鈥淢y life has imploded,鈥 she said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty bad. Really bad. It鈥檚 taken over my life.鈥

Mitchell said she has been ill in the past but 鈥渘othing life-altering.鈥

Too ill to accept the offer of a 鈥渄ream job,鈥 she has been on medical leave for months.

When smoke from wildfires hit 颅Victoria, she was bedridden for days, she said. She suffers from anxiety and brain fog. 鈥淚t makes me feel stupid.鈥

On Friday, the province reported 671 new cases of COVID-19, including 44 in Island Health. There were 14 people in hospital with COVID in Island Health, and all but two were critically ill in intensive care.

Mitchell wishes her experience with the deadly and highly infectious virus could enlighten the anti-vaccination 颅protesters who swarmed sa国际传媒鈥檚 颅legislature and hospitals in Nanaimo, Duncan, Vancouver and other sa国际传媒 cities this week in ugly protests denounced by Premier John Horgan, the Union of sa国际传媒 Municipalities and others.

Mitchell said she鈥檚 torn between 颅frustration and a need to reach out before the divide grows larger.

鈥淲e wonder how we reached a time when science isn鈥檛 trusted, but reviled; when medical marvels aren鈥檛 颅celebrated, but stigmatized; and when illness is seen as preferable to the cure,鈥 Mitchell wrote in an opinion article.

鈥淟ike many of us, my gut reaction to anti-vaxxers is one of rage. Disgust. Anger.鈥

Mitchell said she has unvaccinated family members. She doesn鈥檛 颅support their position or understand their 颅reasoning, especially considering they have a front-row seat to her daily 颅battles, but she loves them deeply, and they love her.

鈥淚n the same breath, I want to smash egg yolks down the skulls of protesters who accosted a nurse as she was leaving a twelve-hour shift,鈥 wrote Mitchell.

鈥淲hen I hear that anti-vaxxers blocked an ambulance, I 颅imagine COVID tearing through the crowd like an all-you-can-eat bacterial buffet. When a family member mentions they鈥檙e unvaccinated, I want to ask them if they care whether I live or die.鈥

Mitchell is going to a post-COVID recovery clinic at St. Paul鈥檚 Hospital in Vancouver in two weeks, but sometimes she despairs that she鈥檒l never recover.

If she were to speak with an anti-vaxxer, she said, she would ask them where they get their information, and what they hope to gain from harassing health-care workers.

Angrily attacking anti-vaxxers only convinces them they鈥檙e oppressed, and that they鈥檙e right, she said.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 collectively heal with two factions so 颅diametrically opposed,鈥 said Mitchell. 鈥淔ostering change is an act of empathy, not violence, and our cause needs us to do 颅better.鈥

Modern science will lead us out of this pandemic, said Mitchell, but patience and kindness is needed to heal the divide.

She said she wants to call anti-vaxxers 鈥渋n, not out.鈥 鈥淚鈥檇 like to ask about your beliefs and challenge them, respectfully. I鈥檇 like you to hear mine. I鈥檇 like to tell you what it means to be a COVID long-hauler.

鈥淎nd I鈥檇 like to ask others in my corner 鈥 that is, the vaccinated 鈥 to do the same.鈥

Dr. Bonnie Henry, provincial health officer, was asked about 鈥渓ock her up鈥 chants during anti-vaccine-passport protests this week and said it鈥檚 something she has been living with throughout the pandemic. 鈥淲hat upsets me is the amount of vitriol and anger that has been directed at others in public health and at my team, and at my staff. That鈥檚 inexcusable and very upsetting.鈥

In the aftermath of the protests, health-care workers have been inundated with messages of support, both online and at their worksites.

Workers arriving at Victoria General Hospital on Friday saw inspirational messages written in chalk on the sidewalk, including: 鈥淰ictoria loves you, thank you for being so brave.鈥

Staff also received a bag of candy and a note reminding health-care workers that the vast majority of the public are horrified by the protests and appreciate their efforts.

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