I gave it the benefit of the doubt for the first couple of weeks and was helping friends and family get ahold of sanitizer/gloves/masks. But then the news wouldn't shut up about lines out the door at hospitals and clinics being overwhelmed as people were dying in the hallways waiting to be seen.
I work in an urgent care (which is ordinarily overwhelmed on a normal day), and despite management preparing for a huge influx of covid patients, we were a ghost town. So was the hospital next door. At which point, I realized we were being fucked with.
I gave it the benefit of the doubt for the first couple of weeks and was helping friends and family get ahold of sanitizer/gloves/masks. But then the news wouldn't shut up about lines out the door at hospitals and clinics being overwhelmed as people were dying in the hallways waiting to be seen.
I work in a 24 hour urgent care (which is ordinarily overwhelmed on a normal day), and despite management preparing for a huge influx of covid patients, we were a ghost town. So was the hospital next door. At which point, I realized we were being fucked with.
I gave it the benefit of the doubt for the first couple of weeks and was helping friends and family get ahold of sanitizer/gloves/masks. But then the news wouldn't shut up about lines out the door at hospitals and clinics being overwhelmed as people were dying in the hallways waiting to be seen.
I work in a specialty clinic in the middle of a downtown area with a 24 hour urgent care (which is ordinarily overwhelmed on a normal day), and despite management preparing for a huge influx of covid patients, we were a ghost town. So was the hospital next door. At which point, I realized we were being fucked with.