Mercury (Hobart)

IT’S JABS, OR IT’S YOUR JOBS

Nurse shares nightmare of life after Covid

- AMBER WILSON

THE harrowing tale of a nurse who caught Covid, with her quality of life still at “unrecognis­able” lows more than a year later, has been relayed as an urgent warning to unvaccinat­ed Tasmanians.

On Wednesday, Health Department secretary Kathrine MorganWick­s said the woman wanted to share her story in the hopes it would encourage others to get the jab.

Ms Morgan-Wicks said the nurse had become infected during the North West Regional Hospital outbreak in April last year.

“I’m in my 50s. I’ve never had any health issues at all. I very rarely took paracetamo­l and am on no other medication. I worked full time. I lived a very full life,” the nurse said.

“I’ve been lucky to have travelled a lot. But Covid changed my life so much that some days, I don’t recognise myself.

“I have fatigue like I have never experience­d before. It is nothing like being tired. When you’re tired, you have a good sleep and you feel better. I never feel better.

“I have constant headaches and it makes me feel like my head’s being crushed. I have heart issues, a coronary stent, blood pressure and heart rate I can’t control, joint pain and swelling on a daily basis, nerve pain that makes my skin feel like it’s burning. I still have a cough, I have shortness of breath, so day-to-day tasks do involve a lot of extra time just to get things done.

“The biggest issues and the scariest issues I have are my diagnosed cognitive impairment. I have problems following everyday conversati­ons and keeping up with my peers.

“I have no taste or smell … there is no pleasure in anything you eat or drink anymore.

“I understand some people are hesitant about the vaccinatio­n and what they think it can do to their health.

“(But) I wouldn’t want anyone to end up like me, or to feel the guilt of giving it to someone else.”

Ms Morgan-Wicks said she would be pursuing terminatio­n action as of October 31 for any Tasmanian health care workers who were not vaccinated or provided an exemption.

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