Tuesday was the deadliest day since Minnesota officials started tracking the coronavirus. Nineteen people died, bringing the total to 179.
Seventy per cent of Minnesota fatalities are in long-term care facilities. There are more than 2,700 confirmed cases.
One of the survivors, 72-year-old Duane Reed, is speaking out. He says he was exposed to COVID-19 at a funeral held inside his church in St. Paul.
โWe were only a few people and we were practicing social distancing,โ Reed said.
His deacon and communion partner was also there.
โShe had just come back from New Orleans, her and her husband,โ Reed said.
Two days later, she was diagnosed with COVID-19. Reed began feeling sick three days later.
โThe first four days I thought I just had a cold, so I treated it with NyQuil. Felt OK,โ Reed said. โBut the fifth day I just started to feel real bad, tired, lethargic, just didnโt feel good, so I called the doctor.โ
His deacon was admitted to the hospital, but Reed was quarantined at home.
โI told [a health care professional] I was having cold sweats, and he said thereโs nothing we can do, you donโt sound like youโre breathing very heavy, and I had just gotten a pneumonia shot the first of March, and it was kind of lucky or blessed on that accord,โ Reed said.
For 48 years, Reed and his wife, Willa Ellis Reed, have travelled the world, which is now sidelined by the pandemic. Reed, a Vietnam veteran, says he fought hard and feels blessed to be alive. A University of Minnesota graduate who went on to work and retire from Cargill, Reed says sitting at home gave him time to reflect. He wants young people to take this virus seriously.
โStay home, safe in place. Grocery store, fine. A walk around the block, fine. Do not congregate. Itโs not about you, itโs about what you can do to others,โ he said.
Reed hopes they wash their hands and wear masks in public so he can see them when life returns to normal. (Text and photo courtesy msn.com)