Behind the Numbers: Mike's Story
The importance of continuing safety precautions, such as wearing your mask and other sanitary practices to prevent the spread of COVID-19 cannot be overstated.
We want to share this story about one of our state employees’ experiences with COVID-19
Mike Clark, a Civil Engineer with the Colorado Department of Transportation in Region 1 came down with COVID-19 on Sunday, March 15, and spent nine days in bed getting progressively weaker and sicker. He went with his wife to urgent care and the next thing he remembers is waking up nearly two weeks later in the ICU at St. Anthony's Hospital.
He woke up to nurses in white plastic space helmets, a ventilator down in his lungs with no way to talk, and a constant thirst that couldn’t be satisfied because there was no way to swallow.
Two or three days after waking up, the ventilator was removed, which Mike said felt like having his toenails pulled through his throat, but at least he could whisper and beg for ice cubes to re-hydrate.
After being in bed for so long, he lost up to three percent of muscle mass per day, with no strength to walk and barely enough strength to roll onto the bed pan. Mike puts this pandemic into perspective:
“If there is anything that should prompt you to wear a mask at work, it is the thought of lying in bed, in a hospital, atop a bed pan.”
Mike had to learn to walk again with the help of a walker, and even needed physical therapy to swallow again. Today, Mike is able to eat solid food again and has regained his ability to walk with the assistance of a cane.
After 34 days and a terrifying near-death experience in the hospital, Mike was finally able to return home.
There have been tens of thousands of COVID-19 cases in Colorado. Behind each case is a person. Although we hesitate to say Mike was “lucky,” we know that not all have had as fortunate of an outcome.
Mike is deserving of our thanks for being willing to share his story, so we can all remember what’s at stake. He is a true public servant, and we wish him all the best on his road to recovery.
As businesses and recreational areas open up, it is essential that we:
- Wear a mask -- non-medical or homemade
- Stay at least six feet from each other
- Follow all other safety precautions
- Be safe on work sites to prevent the exposure of this virus
These are common sense steps that everyone can take to keep themselves and their loved ones safe, healthy, and out of the hospital.
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