My husband and I were excitedly looking forward to finally having all our blended family members to our home for Christmas this year but Covid 19 almost ruined it. We will forever remember it as the “Covid” Christmas.
We felt fortunate that one of our families was driving to Ohio for an early Christmas with their vaccinated in-laws before driving home in time for our Christmas celebration, especially after we saw other people around the country waiting in lines for hours to get a Covid test before the holidays. We were also glad that they decided to drive when we saw thousands of airline flights delayed or cancelled because of Covid, bad weather and staffing shortages.
However, it turned out that one vaccinated in-law in Ohio attended a large rock concert a few days before the Christmas celebration. Although he showed no symptoms at the time, our youngest grandchildren started to cough and get sick on the ride home.
Early on Christmas morning, the parents were notified that the in-law now tested positive and they tried frantically to get covid tests for themselves and the grandchildren, one of whom was recently diagnosed with asthma. But there were no covid testing kits available and the pediatric emergency room near them told the parents that they could not do a covid test unless the children were admitted.
After two days, they all finally got their covid tests and were negative.
They missed the Christmas party with the other relatives but celebrated with us grandparents a few days after Christmas and it was wonderful.
HOW COULD THE DEARTH OF COVID 19 TESTS HAPPEN ON CHRISTMAS?
As I wrote in my January 7, 2021 blog “When Can We End Lockdowns for Covid 19?”:
“the FDA (food and Drug Administration) approved the use of several rapid Covid 19 tests, some that can even be done at home. This can be a gamechanger with some experts saying that the massive distribution of rapid self-tests for use in homes, schools, offices, and other public places could replace harmful sweeping lockdowns with knowledge.
And as the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) itself has reported:
“Since March 2020, the FDA has authorized more than 400 COVID-19 tests and sample collection devices, including authorizations for rapid, OTC at-home tests. The FDA considers at-home COVID-19 diagnostic tests to be a high priority and we have continued to prioritize their review given their public health importance.” (All emphasis added)
However in a December 21, 2021 interview, President Biden was said to “express some regret that he didn’t ramp up necessary supplies before the nation got hit with yet another winter coronavirus surge” and announced a plan for the government to “distribute 500 million free rapid in-home test kits in an effort to slow the spread of the virus” and admitted that ““I wish I had thought about ordering half a billion [tests] two months ago”.
However, as reported on December 24, 2021 at webmd.com:
“President Biden has promised Americans that 500 million coronavirus tests will be available for free, but the kits won’t arrive for several weeks or longer”
and
“the Biden administration hasn’t yet signed a contract to buy the tests, and the website to order them won’t be available until January, according to The New York Times“.
CONCLUSION
I have been writing blogs on the various aspects of the Covid 19 pandemic for almost 2 years and I am frustrated by the missteps, lack of accountability and the constantly changing rules that often seem to often be more based on politics rather than science.
We need to demand better from ourselves, our leaders and our country to become a healthier nation mentally, physically and spiritually.
I am preparing an end of life panel discussion for a parish. Can you recommend a POAH? Barbara Surges k1p2missmarple@gmail.com
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I sent a reply by email but it was sent back as undeliverable.
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Amen, Nancy!
Brian got sick five days before Christmas, and Tori was able to buy the last two Covid tests at a Walgreens. He tested positive, she was negative. (He was vaccinated in February; she was vaccinated in July, so she still had immunity.) But then she wanted to keep testing herself to see if she would come down with it asymptomatically. She and I went to almost every Walgreens and CVS within a 30-mile radius on Dec. 23, but there were absolutely none available. So we did not spend Christmas with her. 😢
A Covid Christmas indeed!
Meg is probably checking into the new treatment center right now. Praying all goes well as she finishes her dialectical behavioral therapy.
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