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Survival Story: How One COVID-19 Long Hauler Works to Increase COVID Vaccinations in Black Communities

By Dena Vang | Afro | Word In Black 

This post was originally published on Afro

(WIB) – Antoinette Patterson didn’t think boarding a plane on February 29, 2020, would impact her life the way that it did. She couldn’t have imagined she would face the fight of her life after her plane landed safely on the ground.

Now, two years and a global pandemic later, she’s telling her story. 

“I am a COVID survivor. I am a COVID long hauler — but I am here because of God’s goodness, his grace, and his mercy,” Patterson recently told listeners at a vaccine clinic in Baton Rouge, La. “My COVID story began around March 8, 2020. I was one of the very first in the country, and one of the first in Louisiana, to be diagnosed with COVID-19.”

Patterson shared that while COVID did cross her mind during that time, the virus did not seem to be of concern. Upon returning to Louisiana, Patterson experienced fatigue and a fever and made the decision to visit an urgent care clinic. There, she requested a COVID test — but tests weren’t widely available in the United States. It wasn’t until 13 days later that Patterson was tested for COVID. 

“I am one of those people that had a positive COVID diagnosis for over 3 weeks,” said Patterson. “While I had COVID, I began to experience many different illnesses. COVID attacked my heart, and it also attacked my mind.”

Patterson said she could literally feel the virus moving through her body as it attacked her organs. 

“The biggest part was my heart was malfunctioning. I was put on a heart monitor,” she said. “I had to be monitored by telephone by my cardiologist. At any moment, I could into heart failure. They did not know what was going on with my heart. My heart palpitated so quickly that even touching my chest was very sensitive. I passed out twice and almost died.”

The road to recovery was both a physical and a spiritual battle for Patterson, who credits much of her healing to her faith in God.

“I don’t want anyone to take COVID lightly because I not only had COVID, but I also became a COVID long hauler. Every day from March 8, 2020, to January 30, 2021, I was sick,” said Patterson. “My prayer began to be ‘God, please don’t let me die.’ I pushed and I moved on and I did all those things that seem to be normal in the sight of man. But I knew it was the supernatural strength in God that I was still alive because many days I was very very, very ill. It affected my family. It put my family in worry. At the time that I had COVID, there was no vaccine.”

Patterson, who has received the vaccine, is now using her testimony to encourage others to also get the shot. 

“Some people say COVID isn’t that serious. It’s okay, you’ll have a minor sniffle, you’ll just have a cold. That’s not true for everyone,” she said. “Do not take it lightly. While some only had the sniffles and a headache and fatigue, some people have died that you know, and I know. We want to prevent death, that’s why we’re here today. We want you to be an advocate for life today. How can you be an advocate for life? Get vaccinated.”

COVID vaccines are free and available for those ages 5 and older. To find a vaccine site, search vaccines.gov, text your ZIP code to 438829, or call 1-800-232-0233 to find locations near you.

To view Patterson’s talk and other panel discussions from the Cobb NMA Institute Stay Well Community Health Fair and Vaccine Event, visit the Stay Well Community Health Fairs Facebook page. 

The post Survival Story: How one COVID-19 long hauler works to increase COVID-19 vaccinations in Black Communities appeared first on AFRO American Newspapers .

Support for this Sacramento OBSERVER article was provided to Word In Black (WIB) by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative. WIB is a collaborative of 10 Black-owned media that includes print and digital partners.

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