The Outpost

Former CRTC commander battles COVID-19

- By Mark Schauer

Military policeman. Installati­on commander. Manufactur­ing company president. COVID-19 victim.

From his earliest days as a military police officer in Panama to stints in Afghanista­n and Iraq, Col. John Cavedo, who commanded U.S. Army Cold Regions Test Center from 2009 to 2012, experience­d his share of physical discomfort during more than three decades in the Army.

When he retired from uniform in 2018, he took a job as president of a defense manufactur­ing company in Michigan with 150 employees. He had gained weight without daily PT, but otherwise he was healthy and life was good.

“I took no medication­s. I’m slightly overweight and middleaged: those were my only underlying conditions.”

When the COVID-19 crisis hit in mid-March, he instituted telework at his company for those whose job functions permitted it to help flatten the curve of new infection in the community and keep his workforce healthy. Of the four subordinat­es he worked in closest physical proximity to, only one had a slight cough that last day in the office.

“Her co-workers were making fun of her like, ‘that’s a COVID cough!’” he recalled. “Well, it turns out it probably was.”

Much later all four of the employees took antibody tests that indicated they had been exposed to the virus that has upended the world in 2020, even though none ever displayed the more distressin­g and frightenin­g effects that COVID can bring: pneumonia, blood clots, respirator­y failure. Cavedo, on the other hand, was about to face a rougher fight.

It took nearly two weeks before he showed any symptoms. During this incubation period, life went on in the new normal. Mindful of the 65 employees whose job on the factory floor didn’t allow for telework, he continued going to the office every day, but otherwise stayed at home except for two trips to the grocery store. He wore a face mask and practiced social distancing at all times. As March became April he made good on a promise to fight the weight gain he had experience­d after retiring from the Army.

“The first week of April I started a new workout regimen. That weekend I thought, ‘I really pushed myself this week’—my body was sore, my back hurt, my triceps were sore.”

The aches intensifie­d at work that Monday. Fatigue began to set in.

“When I came home from work, I was absolutely exhausted.”

It was unlike him, but he went to bed at 6:00 that evening. More than 11 hours later, his body still ached and he had a slight fever. He stayed home from work the next two days. When he woke up Thursday morning, the nagging body aches persisted, but his temperatur­e was normal. He brushed off his wife Stephanie’s skepticism and went to the office.

“I thought maybe it was allergies, maybe it was a slight cold. I’m the president of my company-- I didn’t want my team to think I was missing in action. Leaders sometimes push themselves too far to not abandon their team.”

He socially-distanced from the employees and wore a mask as he walked around the shop floor, but retreated to his office as his body aches and fatigue intensifie­d. When he began to have a slight, but persistent dry cough he went to the county health department to be swabbed for COVID-19.

“That evening I felt really bad. The next morning I was coughing constantly.”

The body aches got even worse and the fever returned, then broke over the weekend. But the coughing intensifie­d and his breathing became labored. On Sunday evening, he got the call from the health department: he was COVID positive.

“I asked them if hospitaliz­ation was going to be necessary. They said it wouldn’t unless I got significan­tly worse.”

He did. The next morning he was stricken in his home office as he tried to coordinate things at work. He tried to walk upstairs to bed, but was floored before he could make it.

“I had a scary feeling like someone was sitting on my chest and holding a bag over my head,” he recalled.

His wife rushed him to the emergency room. Worried that he had suffered a heart attack, the staff monitored him until night had fallen. His blood oxygen levels were abnormal, but not low enough to justify being administer­ed oxygen. When he seemed to stabilize, he was discharged.

 ??  ?? “I thought maybe it was allergies, maybe it was a slight cold. I’m the president of my company-- I didn’t want my team to think I was missing in action. Leaders sometimes push themselves too far to not abandon their team.”(Photo by Mark Schauer)
“I thought maybe it was allergies, maybe it was a slight cold. I’m the president of my company-- I didn’t want my team to think I was missing in action. Leaders sometimes push themselves too far to not abandon their team.”(Photo by Mark Schauer)

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