Detroit Free Press

TODAY IN HISTORY

- Robin Erb

Today is Wednesday, March 3, the 62nd day of 2021. There are 303 days left in the year.

On this date in:

1845: Florida became the 27th state.

1863: President Abraham Lincoln signed a measure creating the National Academy of Sciences.

1887: Anne Sullivan arrived at the Tuscumbia, Alabama, home of Captain and Mrs. Arthur H. Keller to become the teacher for their deafblind 6-year-old daughter, Helen.

1931: “The Star-Spangled Banner” became the national anthem of the United States as President Herbert Hoover signed a congressio­nal resolution.

1943: In London’s East End, 173 people died in a crush of bodies at the Bethnal Green tube station, which was being used as a wartime air raid shelter.

1945: The Allies fully secured the Philippine capital of Manila from Japanese forces during World War II.

1960: Lucille Ball filed for divorce from her husband, Desi Arnaz, a day after they had finished filming the last episode of “The Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Show.”

1974: A Turkish Airlines DC-10 crashed shortly after takeoff from Orly Airport in Paris, killing all 346 people on board.

1991: Motorist Rodney King was severely beaten by Los Angeles police officers in a scene captured on amateur video.

1996: Israel declared “total war” against the militant group Hamas after a bus bomb in Jerusalem killed 19 people, including the bomber, the third such suicide attack in eight days.

2001: A plane carrying members of a National Guard engineerin­g crew crashed in heavy rain near Macon, Ga., killing all 21 people on board.

For much of last year, Michigan’s nurses and other front-line workers were sometimes called names, cursed at or lied to.

They scrambled to fill staff shortages, track down masks or other supplies, and, in some cases, as the virus tore through their communitie­s, found there was precious little they could do for thousands of the sick and dying.

Then, finally, vaccines arrived. And nearly one year after the virus was first confirmed in Michigan, these same health workers are finding their days filled with an entirely different emotion:

Joy.

It arrives in less than a milliliter, appointmen­t after appointmen­t, syringe after syringe.

People are “just giddy, ready to be vaccinated,” said Sue Leeson, who oversees the communicab­le diseases program at the Central Michigan District Health Department in Isabella

County.

That happiness is proving contagious. Mary Wisinski, a nurse for 43 years in Kent County, gathered with colleagues at the health department last week as they handed three balloons and a blue foam crown to Shelley Grissom, a Grand Rapids grandmothe­r. Staff applauded. A camera rolled.

“I almost feel like it’s my birthday,” Grissom said in a video later posted to YouTube.

She laughed: “I’m very excited about getting the vaccine. I’ve been waiting forever for it. I’ve … called around and made everybody crazy asking ‘When am I going to get my shot?’ ”

“People had tears in their eyes,” Wisinski said of that moment. “It was just so inspiring. … I could barely restrain myself from crying.”

What a difference a couple months can make.

The stress of a pandemic that remains far from finished overwhelme­d public health workers last year. Workers routinely faced abuse as they conducted contact tracing to try and slow infection. They grew to recognize quickly — by the tone of the voice on the other end of their calls — whether they would find cooperatio­n or cursing.

One worker was accused of working for Satan. When the worker’s health department in the Upper Peninsula tried to warn men of COVID-19 exposure following a church retreat, it received little cooperatio­n.

But these days?

“People had tears in their eyes. It was just so inspiring. … I could barely restrain myself from crying.”

Mary Wisinski

Nurse for 43 years in Kent County

Tears and balloons for some workers. Handwritte­n cards. Happy chatter.

Jessica Andrade, a medical assistant, sees the relief and gratitude in the people to whom she gives vaccines at Community Health and Social Services, or CHASS, a health clinic in Detroit.

“They’ll say the needle on the TV looks so big,” Andrade said. “But then after I’m done, they’ll say ‘Are you sure you gave it to me?’ ”

For many, there’s joy in the simple act of traveling to a COVID-19 vaccine site.

“They haven’t left their homes in nearly a year,” Andrade said. “It can be very emotional. They hope this (vaccine) gets them back to routine.”

Isabella County’s Leeson sees these glimmers of optimism, too.

“You can kind of see an end point,” she said, “like hopefully we'll get back to some sort of normal in the next six to eight months, and I think that's the hope of the people that you vaccinate as well.”

Wisinski, the nurse, received Kent County’s first vaccine back on Dec. 18. Two months later, she was present for another milestone. After sorting through the day’s vaccinatio­n schedule, someone grabbed a Sharpie, reached for the balloons that would be handed to Grissom and wrote: “20,000th COVID vaccine.”

In January, Kent County nurses wearing scrubs and masks carried their transport tote with vaccines into Olivia’s Gifts, a home for residtnts with developmen­tal disabiliti­es. The residents wore special T-shirts, including one that read “Science will win.”

Before they left, and again when they returned with second doses weeks later, the nurses received homemade cards of colorful scribbles with the words “thank you.” Residents signed them with their fingerprin­ts stamped in bright ink.

“We were so grateful,” said Britany Greendyk, Olivia’s human resources manager.

Residents at the home, many with high medical needs, hadn’t been able to leave the facility for recreation in nearly a year, Greendyk said. Family members were banned in all but extraordin­ary cases.

Now, some families are visiting again. Staff are making plans for the younger residents to return to school.

“It just feels like all good things,” she said, “thanks to the vaccine.”

Last spring, Eric Scott and his colleagues at the Detroit Medical Center took the brunt of COVID-19 as it slammed into southeast Michigan.

As a clinical nurse manager, Scott had to manage a staff dwindling by fear and their own COVID-19 infections, as sick and dying patients overwhelme­d the region’s hospitals.

“The work was so stressful because we didn't know anything (about COVID-19) and we were developing processes on the fly,” he said.

He got used to a few hours of fitful sleep each night, the 63-year-old said Friday.

“Every morning, every morning I would look at myself in the mirror and — this is a little emotional — but I would think of the words to say to resign,” he said. “Then I would come into work, and I would say a prayer, ‘God help me,’ and I would think of an excuse not to resign.”

He’s still working through staff shortages, he said. And he and others are quick to note that COVID-19 is far from over. As of Friday, 15,545 Michigan deaths had been linked to COVID-19, and 727 people were hospitaliz­ed across the state.

But daily conversati­ons now also include, “Congratula­tions!,” said Scott, whose main task these days has turned to vaccinatin­g staff and the public.

He says it to everyone he vaccinates.

“To me,” he said, “congratula­tions now means ‘you're one step closer to not being sick and ill from coronaviru­s.’ ”

Bridge Magazine, Detroit Free Press and Michigan Radio are teaming up to report on Michigan hospitals during the coronaviru­s pandemic. We will be sharing accounts of the challenges doctors, nurses and other hospital personnel face as they work to treat patients and save lives. If you work in a Michigan hospital, we would love to hear from you. You can contact reporters Robin Erb rerb@bridgemi.com at Bridge, Kristen Jordan Shamus kshamus@freepress.com at the Free Press.

 ?? PROVIDED BY KENT COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT ?? Staff from the Kent County Health Department celebrated — and a few cried — when Shelley Grissom of Grand Rapids received the department’s 20,000th COVID-19 vaccine, said long-time public health nurse Mary Wisinski.
PROVIDED BY KENT COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT Staff from the Kent County Health Department celebrated — and a few cried — when Shelley Grissom of Grand Rapids received the department’s 20,000th COVID-19 vaccine, said long-time public health nurse Mary Wisinski.

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