
5 years after first cases, Manitoba families who lost loved ones to COVID-19 still feel missed moments
CBC
Retired nurse Valerie Alderson doesn't find herself thinking back to the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic anymore, but when someone brings it up, "it's a flashback of what has happened."
That includes the death of her 82-year-old dad, Lloyd Hodgins, who was sent to the hospital after breaking his hip in a fall and died not long after of COVID-19 complications, in November 2021, "all alone, without anybody," because of pandemic rules at the time restricting hospital visitors.
"Both my sister and I were vaccinated. We could have had our masks on, visors on, gown on, gloves on to be with him," said Alderson, 63.
"I always think it's important that when you have a loved one go … for someone to be there, whether it's to hold their hand, to wipe their face, to sing a song, to read poetry, whatever. Because the hearing is the last thing that goes on any person that's passing away, and then they're gone."
Justin Dusik's family also went through that experience.
The 34-year-old said he never got the chance to say goodbye to his grandparents, who both died in their 80s within less than two weeks of each other in 2021.
When his grandpa died, his three sons had to watch over a video call as he took his last breaths, Dusik said.
"To me, it's almost heartless, where you don't get the basic human decency to be in person to comfort that loved one during a tough time in their life or to, you know, hold a hand, say your goodbyes," Dusik said.
"But during the pandemic, we didn't get that opportunity. So people passed away alone. People passed away without saying their goodbyes or letting their last thoughts be known."
While both have been able to move on, they said they still in a way carry those times with them almost five years after Manitoba's first presumptive COVID-19 cases were reported in March 2020.
"In the end, you can't reconcile that. You never get that opportunity again with that person," Dusik said. "But there was nothing we could do about it at the time."
It's a phenomenon that became fairly common during parts of the pandemic — and a policy choice one advocate says "really broke people emotionally" and that may have been approached differently, in hindsight.
"It's hard to explain the terror that you have by having one of your loved ones taken away or locked up and having absolutely no idea if they're alive or dead or if they're in a critical condition," said Laura Tamblyn Watts, CEO of national seniors' advocacy organization CanAge.
"We had people for whom their spouses were hospitalized, and they couldn't really even get a hold of them, not even on the phone, to find out what was happening to them — and then days later, finding out that they were on ventilators."

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