1 year later: Vermonters reflect on life during the COVID-19 pandemic Share Updated: 10:51 PM EST Mar 11, 2021 Matt Leighton Share Updated: 10:51 PM EST Mar 11, 2021
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Show Transcript HOW IT S FELT. THE BEST AND WORST PARTS. AND WHAT THEY RE LOOKING ZACHARY PUZYCKI / BURLINGTON - IT SEEMS LIKE IT S BEEN A LOT LONGER THAN A YEAR, I CAN SAY THAT LIAM MAGERR / BURLINGTON - THE LAST YEAR FOR ME HAS BEEN PRETTY TOUGH, I WOULD SAY THIS LAST YEAR HAS FELT LIKE CLOSER TO A DECADE NAOMI ORNE / WINOOSKI - IT WAS PRETTY SCARY I THINK AT FIRST LIKE WORKING AT THE HOSPITAL AND I CAME FROM A MUCH SMALLER HOSPITAL AND THERE WAS LIKE A MOMENT WHERE WE DIDN T HAVE ENOUGH MASKS FOR EVERYONE AND THAT WAS KIND OF SCARY AND ESPECIALLY WITH THE FOOD AND THE PEOPLE RUSHING TO THE GROCERY STORES AND STUFF, IT FELT REALLY SCARY LIAM MAGERR / BURLINGTON - THE WORST PART OF THE LAST YEAR WOULD SAY, I ACTUALLY WAS WORKING IN MED SURG
How Many Granada Residents Will Die? Deputy Health Officer Dr. Josh Ennis Takes Media Questions on the Pandemic
Is the county keeping track of workplace outbreaks? How many Granada residents will die? Are medical staff being tested often enough? Is the trigger for the state’s new stay-at-home order less than 15 percent of ICU capacity actually too lax? Are there enough people to staff all our ICU beds?
Dr. Josh Ennis, deputy health officer, answered these media questions and more in today’s media availability on the county’s COVID response. Video above, rough transcript below.
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The North Coast News asks, “Are county health officials keeping track of the number of workplace