Man recounts experience with COVID-19 after resisting vaccine
While more and more people are getting vaccinated, there are still a significant number of people who refuse to get vaccinated or even cover their faces. COVID-19 Update | Maryland latest issue | Check | Information about vaccines || “You have to face your own mortality – it’s right there. You just don’t know if you can go on for another five or 10 minutes,” Whalen said. Whalen spent 36 days at Carroll Hospital Center with COVID-19, six of them in the critical care unit. In the days before her diagnosis, Whalen was playing golf and moving her daughter into her college dorm. When offered concert tickets that required a vaccination or tested negative, he decided to get one. “I think it’s like some sort of conspiracy that 10 years from now, 100,000,000 Americans will have some kind of rare disease because of the long-term studies. The day after the J&J vaccination, Whalen said,” Whalen said. he didn’t feel well. He assumed it was a side effect of the vaccine, then things went downhill. “By the time I had to go to the care, I was very sick, they actually called a car. first aid right there,” says Whalen. “When your lungs stop working, it doesn’t happen slowly. I was like ‘all of a sudden, I can’t breathe.'” He was put on oxygen and laid on his stomach. Whalen said he thought he was going to die. The hospital called his sister to make sure he has a will and that his job is okay.” “It’s tough when you’re lying there and you don’t know what’s going to happen and your nurses are telling you your number. must be” Whalen said he was always thinking about his daughter and how he couldn’t leave her. He is much better now but said his lungs are permanently scarred. And he’s not an anti-vaxxer anymore. “Let’s get to the facts, weigh the consequences because what I’m telling people is that there can be some long-term effects, but I know that this virus will kill you right now and you won’t say Whalen. Whalen asks those who don’t want to get vaccinated or wear masks to take themselves out of the equation. “Think of the people who depend on you and love you, care about you and think about what would happen if you weren’t here. That’s the message,” Whalen said. Very grateful to the people who took care of him in the hospital, he raised $12,000 which he used to help them eat lunch and dinner. He still has some money left and when things slow down, he has more surprises for them.
While more and more people are getting vaccinated, there are still a significant number of people who refuse to get vaccinated or even cover their faces.
Carroll County resident Brent Whalen was one such person until he fell ill.
|| Update COVID-19 | Maryland’s latest issue | Tested | Information about vaccines ||
“You have to face your own death – it’s right there,” Whalen said. “You don’t know if you can last another five or 10 minutes.”
Whalen spent 36 days at Carroll Hospital Center with COVID-19, six of them in the critical care unit. In the days before her diagnosis, Whalen was playing golf and moving her daughter into her college dorm. When offered concert tickets that required a vaccination or tested negative, he decided to get one.
“I think it’s like some sort of conspiracy that 10 years from now, 100,000,000 Americans will have some kind of rare disease because long-term studies haven’t shown the vaccine’s effects,” he said.
The day after the J&J shot, Whalen said he wasn’t feeling well. He assumed it was a side effect of the vaccine, then things went downhill.
“By the time I had to go to the emergency room, I was so sick, they actually called an ambulance,” Whalen said. “When your lungs stop working, it doesn’t happen slowly. I was like ‘suddenly, I can’t breathe.'”
He was given oxygen and lying on his stomach. Whalen said he thought he was going to die. The hospital called his sister to make sure he had a will and that everything was fine.
“It’s tough when you’re lying there and you don’t know what’s going to happen and your nurses are telling you your numbers aren’t getting any better,” he said.
Whalen says he is always thinking about his daughter and how he couldn’t leave her. He is much better now but says his lungs are permanently scarred. He does respiratory therapy at home.
And he is no longer an anti-vaxxer.
“Find the facts, weigh the consequences because what I’m telling people can have some long-term effects, but I know this virus is going to kill you now and you won’t be,” Whalen said. What’s the problem?” .
Whalen asks those who don’t want to get vaccinated or wear masks to take themselves out of the equation.
“Think of the people who depend on you and love you, care about you, and think about what would happen if you weren’t here. That’s the message,” Whalen said.
Whalen is grateful to the people who took care of him in the hospital, he has raised $12,000, which he uses to help them eat lunch and dinner. He still has some money left and when things slow down, he has more surprises for them.