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In the Pocket: Criscuolo is on fast track to success | The Daily Gazette SECTIONS Shares0 Although 41-year-old Gabe Criscuolo Jr. only became serious about the sport of bowling roughly seven years ago, his desire to excel put him on a fast track to success. Don’t be surprised if he pops up in a bowling center near you. This guy loves to roll the rock. Now living in Schenectady, Criscuolo, and his wife Elizabeth, the Senior Pastor at Nazarene Church, are both originally from Connecticut. They only dabbled in tenpins until fairly recently. Yet both of them have become passionate about the game and the many friends they meet at the lanes. ....
“I’m thinking maybe I am going through a heart attack,” Fredrick said. He wasn’t experiencing a heart attack, Fredrick had contracted COVID-19. Knowing he had high blood pressure and some other health complications, Fredrick said he became very anxious about his test results. But that fear began to subside when he heard the “calmness” in the voices of the nurses who began to monitor him through a remote patient monitoring program offered at the Medical University of South Carolina. Fredrick, of Mullins, South Carolina, was monitored in his home by nurses Eric Quinlivan, R.N., outreach clinical coordinator for Center for Telehealth, and Cheryl Hamill, R.N., telehealth remote patient monitoring coordinator. Both were located more than 100 miles away. They contacted him daily by phone to learn about his symptoms and provide instructions on how to improve his condition. ....
For Roger Flynn, one of the most troublesome aspects of contracting COVID-19 was that he could not receive treatment from his longtime family doctor. “It was getting harder and harder to breathe,” Flynn said. “It progressively got worse and worse and worse, and I called my family doctor, and she said you can’t come in - you’ve got to go get tested.” Flynn, a retiree from Great Falls, South Carolina, had been suffering from a dry cough and a fever. He was accustomed to breathing difficulties due to having Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). He never smoked cigarettes, but his lungs were damaged from breathing in dust when he worked in a local textile mill. But this illness felt different, Flynn said he could tell something wasn’t right. ....