JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Thursday, August 14, 2025

Surviving COVID-19: The disease no one asks for

by

BOBIE-LEE DIXON
1910 days ago
20200522
Sharda Kelly

Sharda Kelly

BO­BIE-LEE DIXON

(bo­bie-lee.dixon@guardian.co.tt)

Shar­da Kel­ly froze on the phone when she re­ceived that March 29, call with the words: “You have test­ed pos­i­tive for COVID-19,” com­ing from the voice of her coun­ty med­ical of­fi­cer on the oth­er end.

There were no words she could have put to her feel­ing to de­scribe what that news did to her, she tells Guardian Me­dia.

Al­ready hav­ing a com­pro­mised im­mune sys­tem hav­ing been di­ag­nosed with the au­toim­mune ill­ness—lu­pus, Kel­ly was wrecked, be­liev­ing it could eas­i­ly be­come her end.

When she was picked up at her home that evening, all the way to the Cou­va Hos­pi­tal, Kel­ly asked her­self was this a dream.

Days pri­or, on March 18, Kel­ly re­calls de­vel­op­ing a cough which sub­se­quent­ly be­came per­sis­tent. By March 24, a bad sore throat fol­lowed. The cough be­came so dread­ful that Kel­ly would throw up; evening chills, headaches, and even­tu­al­ly a bit of re­stric­tion when breath­ing, now al­so ac­com­pa­nied these symp­toms. By March 26, Kel­ly says, all the symp­toms wors­ened.

Over­come with wor­ry, the 47-year-old moth­er of four, reached out to a rel­a­tive work­ing in the health sec­tor, ex­plain­ing her symp­toms. The rel­a­tive re­ferred her con­cerns to a doc­tor who ad­vised she should vis­it the hos­pi­tal to get test­ed.

Kel­ly told Guardian Me­dia, she and her fam­i­ly had trav­eled to Ve­gas on Car­ni­val Sat­ur­day ear­li­er this year and they re­turned to T&T on Feb­ru­ary 27.

“We took all pre­cau­tions. At the time we trav­eled the virus was on­ly an­nounced in Chi­na,” Kel­ly ex­plains.

She says they were even about to can­cel their reser­va­tions with the ho­tel and air­line but were told by per­son­nel, there were no trav­el re­stric­tions on their des­ti­na­tion, nor was it known of any COVID-19 cas­es there.

“Even the day be­fore we trav­eled we called and in­quired again and were told the same,” Kel­ly re­calls.

Up­on the fam­i­ly’s re­turn, they passed tem­per­a­ture ex­am­i­na­tions by health of­fi­cials, com­ing through the air­port. Kel­ly says, she went straight home and re­mained there as was her prac­tice pri­or to her trav­el—a pre­cau­tion­ary mea­sure she took in light of her health con­di­tion which she was pre­vi­ous­ly warned by her doc­tor, made her more vul­ner­a­ble to com­pli­ca­tions should she at­tract the virus.

How­ev­er, on March 9, Kel­ly and a few mem­bers of her fam­i­ly vis­it­ed a de­part­ment store. Again, on March 11, she did some gro­cery shop­ping and on the fol­low­ing day, March 12, she vis­it­ed a bak­ing in­sti­tu­tion.

On the doc­tor’s pre­vi­ous ad­vice, to vis­it the hos­pi­tal, fol­low­ing her in­creased symp­toms, Kel­ly vis­it­ed the Mt Hope Hos­pi­tal on March 27 where her vi­tals were checked, symp­toms list­ed and a swab test ad­min­is­tered for COVID-19, af­ter she told them of her then trav­el his­to­ry and her health con­di­tion.

She re­calls al­so be­ing giv­en a chest x-ray and then told by doc­tors she had to re­main in quar­an­tine at the hos­pi­tal.

At 2 am on March 28, Kel­ly was re­leased and sent home with the ad­vice to self-quar­an­tine. She says she fol­lowed in­struc­tions to a T and stayed in her bed­room at home. She was ex­pect­ed to get the re­sults with­in 48 hours.

The phone call she re­ceived on March 29, would shat­ter her. In the most sur­re­al mo­ment, Kel­ly be­came one of T&T’s COVID-19 pos­i­tive cas­es.

“Hav­ing read all the scary sto­ries of peo­ple who died from the virus, I was just be­side my­self. I thought, this could be the end for me,” Kel­ly sighs.

At the Cou­va Hos­pi­tal, a self-em­ployed Kel­ly was as­signed to a bed in a room with three oth­er COVID-19 pa­tients. It was found, she had al­so de­vel­oped a lung in­fec­tion which she says was treat­ed im­me­di­ate­ly with an­tibi­otics and plaque­nil—a med­ica­tion for lu­pus, Kel­ly was al­ready tak­ing.

It must have been the third day of her hos­pi­tal­i­sa­tion, when Kel­ly says she be­gan vom­it­ing again and hav­ing chills.

“I re­mem­ber I al­most faint­ed be­cause I was vom­it­ing so much. The nurs­es came and helped me back to my bed. See­ing my con­di­tion, they want­ed to trans­fer me to ward two—the High De­pen­den­cy Unit (HDU),” Kel­ly re­counts.

How­ev­er, it was not a unit Kel­ly want­ed to will­ing­ly go. She un­der­stood that could mean some­thing of a worst-case sce­nario. As such, she plead­ed with her at­tend­ing doc­tors to al­low her to stay. They oblig­ed on one con­di­tion—Kel­ly’s vi­tals had to im­prove.

Her bed­mates al­so gave doc­tors the as­sur­ance; they would look af­ter their new friend.

These bed­mates, Kel­ly now calls fam­i­ly, she says were her source of strength, and the bond they all cre­at­ed has last­ed be­yond her re­lease on Wednes­day.

But the en­cour­age­ment to fight to get well did not on­ly come from her hos­pi­tal friends, but Kel­ly says had it al­so not been for the kind doc­tors and nurs­es who pro­vid­ed dai­ly coun­sel and in­spi­ra­tion, her men­tal state would not be some-what sta­ble to­day.

“I re­mem­ber my broth­er and hus­band brought stuff for me. From my room, I could have seen the high­way head­ing south, and see­ing them leave, I just broke down, be­cause it was hard. We could not have vis­i­tors. Even though I could talk to them on Face­time and what not, not be­ing able to talk to them in per­son was not the same. It was hard,” a cry­ing Kel­ly laments.

She says it was one of her bed­mates and the nurs­es who came in and con­soled her, as­sur­ing her it would all be over soon.

“The treat­ment and the sup­port is what kept me go­ing. I am sor­ry about that, it’s still fresh,” Kel­ly mum­bles through sobs.

Asked what was her biggest les­son learned dur­ing her ex­pe­ri­ence she says out­right­ly, the im­por­tance of fam­i­ly.

“One day you are well and the next you don’t know what life holds and what chal­lenges you have to face. But with the sup­port from my fam­i­ly, friends, nurs­es, doc­tors, and my bed­mates, you learn to ap­pre­ci­ate life and the peo­ple around you more.”

Al­though Kel­ly is back home now, she tells Guardian Me­dia, she is on sev­en days quar­an­tine and she was bat­tling a bit of de­pres­sion.

“Some days when I lie down and I think of my ex­pe­ri­ence, I be­come so emo­tion­al and I can­not stop cry­ing. I am so lucky be­cause of the eight peo­ple who died; their fam­i­lies could not even see their bod­ies to get some clo­sure. I think of­ten, what if that were me, what would hap­pen to my fam­i­ly,” Kel­ly pon­ders.

While she urged the pub­lic to take the virus se­ri­ous­ly and ad­here to all safe­ty mea­sures, Kel­ly al­so had a mes­sage for those who have demon­strat­ed in­sen­si­tiv­i­ties to peo­ple who have con­tract­ed the virus and the fam­i­lies of those peo­ple.

Speak­ing from ex­pe­ri­ence she re­veals, her fam­i­ly was treat­ed bad­ly and shunned by res­i­dents of the vil­lage in which she lives. She says the most un­kind words were spo­ken.

“The pub­lic needs to un­der­stand what we were go­ing through phys­i­cal­ly and emo­tion­al­ly, they need to be more hu­man about it. This is some­thing that can hap­pen to any­one. We are not ask­ing for sym­pa­thy but un­der­stand­ing. It is not an ill­ness any­one asks for.”

COVID-19COVID-19 deaths


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored