Nurse Sunny

Nurse Sunny




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Nurse Sunny
Sunny, a nurse in Arkansas, shares the hate and struggle she has experienced throughout the coronavirus pandemic. CNN's Elle Reeve has more on the mindset of some around Covid-19 in Western Arkansas.
Sunny, a nurse in Arkansas, shares the hate and struggle she has experienced throughout the coronavirus pandemic. CNN's Elle Reeve has more on the mindset of some around Covid-19 in Western Arkansas.
© 2022 Cable News Network. A Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All Rights Reserved. CNN Sans ™ & © 2016 Cable News Network.


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Updated
6:50 AM EDT, Fri July 23, 2021

Nurse explains why she doesn't like the term 'healthcare hero'


06:45

- Source:
CNN


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WILMINGTON, DELAWARE - DECEMBER 08: Jeff Zients, President-elect Joe Biden's pick to head the White House's coronavirus response, speaks during a news conference at the Queen Theater December 08, 2020 in Wilmington, Delaware. With the novel coronavirus pandemic continuing to ravage the country with daily records for infections and deaths, members of Biden's health team said they will make fighting COVID-19 the priority. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Hazel Bailey, a nurse in Arkansas, was on a ventilator for over a month due to Covid-19.

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Sunny worked as a nurse on a Covid-19 floor of a hospital at the height of the pandemic. The work was hard, but what made it surreal was doing it while living in small town Arkansas, where many people, even some in her own family, said the virus was overblown – “just the flu.”


“It’s extremely difficult to watch so many people die, and then have people tell you on Facebook or in Walmart that you’re a liar,” Sunny said. Sometimes that would come from the loved ones of the patients she was taking care of.


“We had people accuse us of giving their loved one something else so that they would die and we could report it as Covid. We heard it more than once that we were fudging the numbers, or we were killing people on purpose to make Covid look like it was worse than it was, or to make it look real when it wasn’t,” she said.


Sunny asked CNN not to use her real name, because some dedicated Covid-19 deniers have harassed health care workers, or tried to get outspoken ones fired.


The politicization that led people to believe Covid-19 was some kind of scam is now affecting how many get vaccinated.


Just 36% of Arkansans are fully vaccinated, the third-lowest rate in the country . This week, Arkansas had its biggest spike in cases since February , and it has the worst case rate in the country. The state government is offering incentives to get vaccinated, like free lottery tickets. It hasn’t convinced many; Gov. Asa Hutchinson has said it’s not working .


Sunny fears that could mean the Delta variant will make many people in her community sick, and push some nurses to quit.


“A lot of nurses have compassion fatigue. And I am really scared of how that’s gonna play out, because a lot of the cases that we’re seeing are in non-vaccinated individuals.”


“Nurses were really the symbol for this pandemic and all of the hate was centered around us – the hate, the fear, the respect, all of it,” Sunny said. A lot of nurses have PTSD from 2020, she said, “And now we’re having people come in and look us in the face and be like, ‘No I didn’t get the vaccine, and now I’m sick.”


CNN drove around the western part of Arkansas last weekend, talking to people about whether they’d get the vaccine.


At a convenience store in Mena, Arkansas, Joy Starr said her 8-year-old son had gotten Covid-19. “He was sick a lot,” Starr said. “He’s been sick a lot for a while. And he’s still sick. He’s having stomach issues. So I’m going to get him looked at and see if there’s further damage. I don’t know, I mean, because he got real sick. Fever every day for weeks. And stomach pain.”


Would she and her son get the vaccine? “No. No vaccine,” Starr said. “I just don’t trust the government.”


In a nearby barber shop, Mike Clark said, “I have not and I will not” get the vaccine.



Biden administration targeting rural communities with funding for vaccine education and outreach, beefing up testing


“I’m not a guinea pig, there’s not a chance,” Clark said. “I believe that it’s a freedom issue and I’ve worn a mask probably a maximum of one hour throughout this whole Covid thing.” He said he was 74, the prime age to get it. “If it’s so communicable, why am I still standing?”


The man cutting his hair, Ronnie Rodgers, said he wouldn’t either. Rodgers said he got Covid-19, then later had a heart attack. He thought he might have a bad reaction to the vaccine. Of course Covid had been politicized, Rodgers said. “It was the red hats against the blue masks.”


Not everyone around here feels this way, of course.


CNN ran into Billy Ray Jones, the mayor of Nashville, Arkansas, at a car wash. He said he was vaccinated, but told us where to find people who weren’t.


In Norman, a man running a yard sale said he’d been vaccinated, too.


“It’s better to take a chance on the shot than it is to take a chance on the Covid,” he said. “Just go on, cowboy up, and go on in there, and get a shot, and come out of there like a grown up.” He was wearing a cowboy hat and said to call him “Cowboy.”


Hazel Bailey was working as a nurse in Hot Springs last August when she got Covid-19. She remembers taking an ambulance to the hospital. She woke up 42 days later. She’d been on a ventilator, then had a tracheostomy tube to help her breathe. Sh
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