The Week (US)

The lives a shot could have saved

Though Covid-19 vaccines are now widely available, vaccine skeptics are refusing them, said Julia Reinstein in BuzzFeedNe­ws.com. Inevitably, some of them have died, leaving survivors with complicate­d grief.

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THEY WEREN’T PEOPLE you’d typically pin as antivaxxer­s. He was a retired engineer, and she had worked as a nurse. But the Florida couple, both in their 80s, refused to get inoculated against the coronaviru­s, and now he’s dead.

Just over a month since her father-in-law died, Marie is still grappling with the painful fact that he and his wife ignored the science to devastatin­g results. “It’s been worse for [my husband] because it’s his father,” says Marie. “But I’m mostly just angry at them, because this didn’t have to happen.” (Marie asked, for privacy reasons like others in this story, that her last name and identifyin­g details about her family not be used.) It didn’t have to happen, but it is happening, and will likely keep happening, to some of the roughly 1 in 5 Americans who’ve said they will not get a Covid-19 vaccine. With every adult in the U.S. eligible for shots since April 19, and for older Americans months before that, there are now people dying of the deadly virus who were already eligible for vaccinatio­n before they became infected. As officials continue to work to overcome issues of accessibil­ity and more and more Americans achieve immunity, a sense of optimism and semi-normalcy is returning to the U.S., and the once merciless death toll will continue shrinking to new, welcome lows. But as long as Covid-19 exists and people keep making the choice to remain unvaccinat­ed, some will, inevitably, die, leaving their loved ones grieving a death that could have been avoided.

“I think the preventabl­e death aspect that we’re now headed into is going to be really hard for people who lose people to it,” said grief therapist and author Claire Bidwell Smith. “It’s not that we could ever get closure or feel resolved about a death, but I think when it was so apparently preventabl­e, it’s something people end up really struggling with.”

Despite their scientific background­s, Marie said, her father- and mother-in-law had lost trust in modern medicine and slipped into vaccine skepticism over the past decade, influenced by the right-wing media they avidly consumed.

Knowing their views, it came as no surprise to Marie or her husband that his parents did not opt for the vaccine when they became eligible months ago. “There really wasn’t anything we could say to sway them,” she said. “Maybe if we lived near them we could’ve been enough of a presence to counter some of that, but they were adults and they made up their own minds.”

After her father-in-law came down with Covid-19 in April, Marie said, he did not seek profession­al medical care. Instead, he self-treated with ivermectin, a drug used to treat parasitic worms that has joined hydroxychl­oroquine as yet another false Covid “miracle drug.” At best, officials warn, it has inconclusi­ve results; at worst, it can be dangerous. Just days after getting sick, Marie said, he died suddenly and unexpected­ly at home of what is thought to have been a heart attack. Marie does not know whether it was caused by Covid-19, which research suggests may lead to heart issues, or the medication he took, which the FDA has said can cause death.

“I’m angry that they didn’t listen to science. I’m angry they let the conservati­ve view of their state government and of the conservati­ve media convince them that Covid is not that much of a threat,” Marie said.

“I feel guilty that I’m not more sad, [but] I know that anger is part of grief, and I expect that the real grief will come.”

RIEF LIKE MARIE’S can be a unique experience—the grief of losing a loved one because of a choice they made. Smith, the therapist and author, said anger is a normal and expected reaction to such a death. “Anger is a powerful emotion, so it’s an easy one to take on when you’re grieving—it’s much more powerful than sadness,” Smith said. “And there are some justifiabl­y angering cases here, where people didn’t take precaution­s, didn’t believe in things.”

GAccording to Smith, many people who were close to someone who died in this

way may experience “complicate­d grief,” a condition in which a person experience­s an intense, long-lasting, and disruptive period of mourning.

“Say you had a very stubborn uncle who didn’t want to get the vaccine and then died of Covid—his loved ones will still somehow assume responsibi­lity,” Smith said. “They may struggle for months, maybe years, with the idea that maybe they could’ve changed his mind and done something to prevent his death.”

To make matters worse, the upcoming few months may be a particular­ly difficult time to be mourning, according to Camille Wortman, a psychology professor at New York’s Stony Brook University who specialize­s in traumatic loss and bereavemen­t. Americans are largely entering a joyful period as the pandemic ebbs toward a muchhoped-for end, which could feel surreal and isolating for people going through grief. “Everybody wants to put the pandemic behind them...they don’t want to think about grief, they don’t want to talk about it, they don’t want to see anyone’s

SABELLA, A 21year-old who lives in Michigan, lost her great-aunt and great-uncle, both of whom were in their late 70s, in just a three-day span late last month. Throughout the pandemic, Isabella had felt like a bit of a black sheep in her conservati­ve, Covidflipp­ant family. Even so, she was shocked when she found out that her great-aunt and great-uncle had died after not getting vaccinated. Both had been eligible for a dose since the beginning of January. “I wanted to go back in time and tell them, ‘You should get the vaccine—it’ll help,’” Isabella said.

But recently, more and more of her family members have started getting vaccinated. Much of this, she believes, is because they saw her safely receive a dose, but she also suspects that losing two of their own was a reality check.

“It opened their eyes a little bit,” she said. “I truly think in the back of their minds they kind of realized more that this is serious and not something to play around with.”

RIANNA BERRY, 32, has spent much of the past year reflecting on how gravely consequent­ial people’s actions can be to those around them. In April 2020, her 37-year-old husband, Lew, died of Covid-19 despite the couple having taken precaution­s to avoid getting sick. She spoke out at the time through his obituary, urging people to take the pandemic seriously so that more people like Lew wouldn’t face such tragic repercussi­ons.

Bgrieving,” Wortman said. “These people who experience­d the loss of a loved one who didn’t have to die, that was preventabl­e, are going to have a really difficult time getting support and love from their own family, friends, and neighbors.”

IBerry said last year’s frustratio­n over people not wearing masks has evolved into similar feelings about people opting out of vaccinatio­n. “I think if I had my husband die because he refused to get vaccinated...I would be so angry at him,” Berry said. “I think it would make my grief so much more complicate­d, because there would’ve been something that could’ve been done, and he wouldn’t have done it.”

While just over 50 percent of the adult U.S. population is now fully vaccinated, seeing the nationwide drop-off in vaccinatio­ns has been upsetting to Berry. She hopes the loved ones of unvaccinat­ed people who die will take it as a wake-up call to get their shot. “When you go through grief, you already think of all the things you could’ve done differentl­y leading up to their death,” she said. “Knowing there’s something that was free, accessible, and could have prevented their death, it’s heartbreak­ing.” “I just keep saying to so many people, ‘It can’t happen to you until it does,’” Berry said. “I never thought I would’ve been a widow at this age.”

Mourning the death of someone who refused a vaccine may be complicate­d for many; not everyone will feel an outpouring of sympathy for a person lost to a choice that put themselves and others in danger. But Kristin Urquiza, whose father died nearly a year ago and who went on to found the organizati­on Marked by Covid, urges people to think about where they’re placing blame.

“It actually kind of boils down to a leadership failure, to me,” she said. “I don’t get angry so much at the individual—I can be disappoint­ed, but I get infuriated at the fact that our government led us to this place.” Urquiza said she hopes people grieving the deaths of unvaccinat­ed loved ones don’t hesitate to seek out support from others who’ve lost people to the virus. She said that just a few weeks ago one man spoke at her online support group about losing his father, who’d refused a vaccine.

“The rawness of his anger and frustratio­n and pain was just so plain on his face,” she said. “Every single person on that Zoom [was] just so crestfalle­n and heartbroke­n for this 30-something-year-old who now has to go through his life without his dad.” “I know what that pain is like,” she said. “And it takes so much to be able to get up every single day and start to piece together your life.”

This article originally appeared in BuzzFeed News.com. Used with permission.

 ??  ?? Anti-vaxxers have taken protests directly to vaccine sites (above); some centers are nearly empty (bottom right).
Anti-vaxxers have taken protests directly to vaccine sites (above); some centers are nearly empty (bottom right).
 ??  ?? In France, Fabienne Garbo (top) rejected a shot for her 86-year-old father.
In France, Fabienne Garbo (top) rejected a shot for her 86-year-old father.

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