The Columbus Dispatch

A year ago, I got first COVID vaccine in US

- Sandra Lindsay

When I rolled up my sleeve to get the country’s first COVID-19 vaccine, little did I know that Day One of the country’s climb back from our pandemic hell would also be my plunge into life as a public figure.

I view that moment on Dec. 14, 2020, now with overwhelmi­ng gratitude, as this year’s holiday season started so differentl­y. The weekend with my grandson and Thanksgivi­ng meal with my mother are a beautiful, stark contrast from this time last year.

At the time of my inoculatio­n in New Hyde Park, New York, the country was experienci­ng another rise in COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations. Front-line workers like me had spent months watching hundreds of thousands of patients die, many of them alone because of socialdist­ancing policies in our hospitals.

My mother, my grandson

Personally, my family and I were facing serious challenges.

The coronaviru­s made it dangerous for me to support my mother emotionall­y in person as she mourned her sister’s death. At the same time, my son and daughter-in-law traveled between their home and a neonatal intensive care unit to oversee their son’s care.

Avery was born prematurel­y as the city locked down during the pandemic’s first wave. Here I was, a nurse trained to save people in the direst circumstan­ces, and I couldn’t help feeling so helpless in the fate of my baby grandson.

I wished he had an easier entrance into what I considered a ruthless world. I prayed that his life would be easier in years to come.

I was burned out, fearful and exhausted. However, I, like my colleagues, refused to miss a day of work. I was determined to show up for my team and my family.

I had learned about COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials but never imagined I would get the first dose after approval for use – or that it would push me to take on such an activist role.

Discoverin­g this part of my identity over the last year has led to a sense of pride. It also led to a personal reckoning.

That’s because some people on the extreme political right and left used my vaccinatio­n to undermine the vaccine effort, distort the clear mission of public health and/or bend our country’s meaning of individual liberty.

I’ve had to take on another role, that of an educator, to keep people from chipping away at the historic medical marvel these vaccines have become. I want to keep misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion at bay – especially when it comes to those hit hardest by the disease COVID-19.

I’m referring to communitie­s of color. As a Black woman, an immigrant from Jamaica and a proud U.S. citizen, I wanted to be a positive influence in a time of need.

But sometimes that idea, too, was twisted into a different narrative.

White supremacis­ts used my COVID-19 vaccinatio­n to find creative ways to peddle hatred.

There were also some from my own

community who said I allowed myself to be manipulate­d.

My vaccinatio­n cannot alter the history of Black people’s abuse under the cover of medical advancemen­t. Nonetheles­s, I do hope it might set us on a path to transparen­cy, trust and, ultimately, equal access to quality medical care across all communitie­s.

I’ve been extremely fortunate to meet world leaders since getting my shot, using my experience to highlight the safety and efficacy of vaccines. I’ve had the honor of being grand marshal at New York City’s ticker-tape parade recognizin­g health care heroes; I celebrated my heritage at the White House with President Joe Biden; I traveled to meet with the prime minister of Jamaica, Andrew Holness, and to speak to the people of the island nation.

It has been a long year, but if some drew inspiratio­n from my spotlighte­d vaccinatio­n to get inoculated themselves, I’d do it all again.

It’s a natural extension of my nursing career.

Unforgivin­g coronaviru­s

As we learn about new variants, I hope that anyone who is still vaccine hesitant can see how immunizati­ons work to slow transmissi­ons, hospitaliz­ations and deaths from this unforgivin­g virus.

I want us to rely more on science than politics.

If this past year has proved anything, it’s that it isn’t always easy to work together, but we’ve also learned how important it is for us to never give up for the sake of health equity – not just in our country, but every country around the globe.

I committed to making this world a better place long before I got my vaccine and, since then, have gained a deeper understand­ing of my profession­al and personal impact.

I will continue to keep politics and patriotism firmly in their place to make room for our next steps, together, to one day reach an end to this pandemic.

Sandra Lindsay, the director of Patient Critical Care Services at Long Island Jewish Medical Center, was the first person in the United States to receive a COVID-19 vaccine outside of a clinical trial.

 ?? FAMILY PHOTO ?? Sandra Lindsay gets America’s first COVID-19 vaccine in New Hyde Park, N.Y., on Dec. 14, 2020.
FAMILY PHOTO Sandra Lindsay gets America’s first COVID-19 vaccine in New Hyde Park, N.Y., on Dec. 14, 2020.
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