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South Dakota nurse: The patients ‘that stick out are those who still don’t believe the virus is real’

 

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WOONSOCKET, S.D. (KELO) — Medical professionals across South Dakota are beginning to speak out about the severity of the pandemic in the state and some are getting national attention for it.

After tweeting her frustration with people who on their deathbed still refuse to believe that they are dying from COVID-19, Jodi Doering’s tweets have gone viral. Doering, who has been a nurse for two decades, says if that’s what it takes for all people in the state to start taking COVID-19 seriously, so be it.

“If my five minutes of Twitter fame can help our state and bring some recognition to convince people this is real and the reality is it might kill you, then I guess I’m just going to ride it and go with it,” Doering said.

“The ones that stick out are those who still don’t believe the virus is real…. These people really think this isn’t going to happen to them. And then they stop yelling at you when they get intubated. It’s like a f****** horror movie that never ends.”

JODI DOERING, RN

Doering is a traveling nurse who works in several rural ERs. She says small hospitals are now being forced to take on a whole new role.

“Usually you could call for a bed in Sioux Falls and Rapid City and we would just transfer those patients. And now the reality is because of the number of patients, we’re hanging on to them,” Doering said.

Doering lives in Woonsocket and points out the current South Dakota death toll of 644 is nearly the entire population of the town.

“That is like taking the entire town off the map. Every teacher, every banker, every kid that goes to school — gone,” she said.

Mother-daughter duo: Jodi and Abby Doering working on the front lines of the pandemic

Doering has seen fellow medical professionals leave the field because of the stress. She’s currently working side-by-side with her daughter, who recently started as an LPN.

“I said to my daughter, you have more courage than most of the elected officials around because you’re 20 years old and you suit up every day and go in and do this.

Doering says the unpredictability of the virus should not be downplayed.

“This is probably the worst thing we’ll ever live through in our lifetime and what really hard is when people have really mild symptoms and then tell all their friends and neighbors it’s no big deal and this is nothing and the next time you turn around you have a 40 to 50-year-old who is not going to survive with the same virus. And there’s absolutely nothing worse in my 22-year-career than doing a goodbye by FaceTime,” Doering said.

Doering says she understands people are sick and tired of the pandemic and no one feels that way more than health care workers.

But she says, now more than ever, people need to understand the seriousness of it and take the appropriate actions to prevent its spread.

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