The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Applauding the heroes who work among us

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We pay tribute to first responders and health care workers put their lives in danger every day.

The sign tells you everything you need to know.

It adorns the entrance to Mercy Fitzgerald Hospital in Darby Borough and proclaims simply: “Heroes Work Here.”

That has been true since the nation – and the globe, really – has been plunged into mortal combat against a faceless, ruthless killer, the novel coronaviru­s and the COVID-19 illness that accompanie­s it.

They are doing hand-tohand combat against the virus, putting their lives on the line in the efforts to contain the pandemic and spare the rest of us from coming face-toface with this clear and present danger.

In many cases, they have done so even as the odds have been stacked against them. They have stood their place, despite often not having the proper personal protective equipment. They have worked marathon shifts. All as part of their jobs.

They are the front lines in the battle against coronaviru­s.

It has not been a war without casualties.

We sadly learned that again this week with the news that a Fitzgerald Mercy paramedic succumbed to complicati­ons from COVID-19.

Kevin Bundy was 33 years old.

He was a full-time paramedic at the Darby Borough institutio­n, and also worked part-time at Crozer-Chester Medical Center.

Bundy was not showing any symptoms of COVID-19 when he tested positive for the coronaviru­s. He was hospitaliz­ed April 7.

His passing rightfully is being marked as being in the line of duty.

“The entire Mercy Fitzgerald family is deeply saddened by the passing of Kevin Bundy, a two-year member of our paramedic team, at our hospital last evening,” Mercy Catholic Medical Center President Chris Cullom wrote in an email Monday. “As a first responder, he demonstrat­ed bravery and compassion with every community member he served. Moreover, we are eternally grateful for all those on the front line putting themselves in harm’s way to help protect us all.”

His death again underscore­d the danger first responders and those working in the health-care field face every day during this pandemic.

Actually, it only underscore­s what they achieve every day, but it seems more acute since this illness broke out, killing thousands and sickening even more.

“Paramedic Kevin Bundy served the residents of Delaware County with honor and dignity during this COVID-19 Crisis,” said Mark Egan, Delaware County president of the Emergency Health Service Council. “He was on the front lines and gave 100 percent each and every shift. Kevin had a heart of gold and big smile. He will be missed by all of us.”

Tim Boyce is the head of the Delaware County Emergency Services and knows the sacrifice – and the price – these workers face every day.

“He represents community members who are serving in their neighborho­od,” Boyce said of Bundy.

They man the ambulances and fire trucks. They are the faces in those police cars. Today they are the visages behind those masks, working every day in hospitals and doctors’ offices.

They are working marathon shifts, sometimes as much as 16 hours at a time, all with the knowledge that they will be getting a view of this disease that few want or would ever seek out. And they keep coming back day after day.

They did not seek out this disease, but they find themselves in the thick of the battle against it.

They find themselves separated from family and friends. While we all are utilizing social distancing as a method of flattening the curve in the war against the coronaviru­s, they are seeing up close and personal.

In many areas, residents have offered their thanks in different ways. Some fire and police department­s have held impromptu drive-bys during shift changes at their local hospitals, sirens wailing and lights flashing.

In New York City, people have started standing on stoops and balconies, banging pots and pans and clapping furiously to mark the shift change at many of their besieged local hospitals.

The sign got it right. They are our heroes. Kevin Bundy was among them.

We salute him for his service – and his sacrifice.

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