Associated Press
REGISTERED NURSE MONICA Quintana dons protective gear Wednesday before entering a room at the William Beaumont hospital in Royal Oak, Mich. Beaumont Health warned that its hospitals and staff had hit critical capacity levels. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
ROYAL OAK, Mich. (AP) Eric Gala passed up an opportunity to get a coronavirus vaccine when shots became available in Michigan, and he admits not taking the virus seriously enough.
Then he got sick with what he thought was the flu. He thought he would sweat it out and then feel back to normal.
Before long, the 63-year-old Detroit-area retiree was in a hospital hooked up to a machine to help him breathe. He had COVID-19.
Variants rose and vigilance fell; why Michigan became country s hotspot for COVID-19
By Corey Williams, David Eggert and Lindsey Tanner
Published
Generic image of a microscopic image of COVID-19 (FOX.)
Then he got sick with what he thought was the flu. He thought he would sweat it out and then feel back to normal.
Before long, the 63-year-old Detroit-area retiree was in a hospital hooked up to a machine to help him breathe. He had COVID-19. I was having more trouble breathing and they turned the oxygen up higher that s when I got scared and thought I wasn t going to make it, a visibly weary Gala told The Associated Press on Wednesday from his hospital bed at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, north of Detroit. I had so many people tell me this was a fake disease.
COREY WILLIAMS, DAVID EGGERT and LINDSEY TANNER
In this April 15 photo, emergency room technicians test patients for COVID-19 outside of the emergency entrance of Beaumont Hospital in Grosse Pointe. Michigan has become the current national hot spot for COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations at a time when more than half the U.S. adult population has been vaccinated and other states have seen the virus diminish substantially. Beaumont Health warned that its hospitals and staff had hit critical capacity levels. (AP photo)
ROYAL OAK Eric Gala passed up an opportunity to get a coronavirus vaccine when shots became available in Michigan, and he admits not taking the virus seriously enough.
Michigan became hotspot as coronavirus variants rose and vigilance fell Follow Us
Question of the Day
By COREY WILLIAMS and DAVID EGGERT AND LINDSEY TANNER - Associated Press - Sunday, April 25, 2021
ROYAL OAK, Mich. (AP) Eric Gala passed up an opportunity to get a coronavirus vaccine when shots became available in Michigan, and he admits not taking the virus seriously enough.
Then he got sick with what he thought was the flu. He thought he would sweat it out and then feel back to normal.
Before long, the 63-year-old Detroit-area retiree was in a hospital hooked up to a machine to help him breathe. He had COVID-19.
ROYAL OAK, Mich. â Eric Gala passed up an opportunity to get a coronavirus vaccine when shots became available in Michigan, and he admits not taking the virus seriously enough.
Then he got sick with what he thought was the flu. He thought he would sweat it out and then feel back to normal.
Before long, the 63-year-old Detroit-area retiree was in a hospital hooked up to a machine to help him breathe. He had COVID-19.
âI was having more trouble breathing and they turned the oxygen up higher â thatâs when I got scared and thought I wasnât going to make it,â a visibly weary Gala said from his hospital bed at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, north of Detroit. âI had so many people tell me this was a fake disease.â