Vulnerable Americans live in the shadow of COVID-19 as most move on
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[January 16, 2025]
By DEVNA BOSE and CARLA K. JOHNSON
Susan Scarbro stares down a bowling lane at the distant pins.
She hears a sound that breaks her focus. Was that a cough? Will her mask
protect her?
COVID-19 remains a very present threat for the 55-year-old. Scarbro has
multiple immune disorders, making her vulnerable to infection.
“Any minute anybody could cough, just incidentally,” said Scarbro, who
lives in Sunset Beach, North Carolina. “And that cough could be the one
thing that could make me sick.”
This month marks the fifth anniversary of the first confirmed case of
COVID-19 in the U.S. The virus would go on to kill 1.2 million Americans
and disrupt countless lives.
While the pandemic's emergency phase ended in May 2023, the threat of
infection remains a governing force in the lives of people like Scarbro.
They protect themselves from the virus with masks and isolate themselves
in small family bubbles. Some grasp for unproven strategies — gargling
with antiseptic mouthwash, carrying a personal carbon dioxide monitor to
check the ventilation of indoor spaces.
In online support groups, they trade research about the danger of repeat
infections and cognitive impairment. They miss the empathy they felt
during the early days of the pandemic. Some have lost friendships, but
they strive to maintain the social ties that are important to mental
health.
Scarbro’s bowling league helps her feel connected to her neighbors. But
recently, she’s detected more stares and skeptical looks from strangers
when she bowls in a mask.
“There was more respect and understanding, but now they’re over it," she
said. "They expect me to be over it, but they don’t understand that even
before COVID-19, these were the precautions I needed to take.”
Most Americans have developed some level of protection against severe
disease from previous COVID-19 infections, vaccinations or both. But
immunocompromised people like Scarbro, who has common variable immune
deficiency, must be constantly vigilant. Unlike the flu, COVID has not
settled into a seasonal pattern.
“There’s never a time when they can relax a little bit,” said Andrew
Pekosz, a virologist at Johns Hopkins University. “That’s a really
challenging and exhausting thing to ask someone to do.”
Who are the people still cautious about COVID-19? They include young
caregivers of vulnerable relatives, people with chronic health
conditions and families rallying around a loved one. In interviews with
The Associated Press, they talked about how they manage the trade-offs
and the toll of isolation on their mental health.
‘How hard is it to put a mask on?’
Before the pandemic, Bazia Zebrowski, 61, of Newbury, Ohio, dined out,
shopped for groceries and took her dog, Shadoh, to the park. When she
felt well, she occasionally could get together with friends despite
having myalgic encephalomyelitis, a condition formerly known as chronic
fatigue syndrome that causes inflammation, immune system problems,
fatigue and pain.
Now she keeps close to home, venturing out only for medical
appointments. Her husband does the shopping and wears a mask at his
workplace.
They have not had COVID-19 and hope their luck holds. Getting sick would
be a disaster, she said, potentially triggering a relapse or
superimposing long COVID-19 onto her illness.
“I don’t consider myself COVID cautious. I consider myself COVID
competent,” Zebrowski said. “Cautious would imply that I have an
unreasonable fear of something. I do not have an unreasonable fear of
this disease.”
What does Zebrowski miss about pre-pandemic times? “I miss the illusion
that people are willing to care for each other,” she said. “How hard is
it to put a mask on? It rattles your faith in humankind … (you learn)
how little the people in your life understood how sick you were to begin
with.”
Trauma is part of the experience of having a chronic illness, said
DePaul University psychologist Leonard Jason, who has studied myalgic
encephalomyelitis for more than three decades.
“Then you're traumatized by the societal reaction to the illness," he
said.
Protecting a partner
Some people aren’t sick themselves but are taking precautions to protect
a family member. Steve Alejandro, 42, of Wentzville, Missouri, calls
himself a COVID shielder.
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Susan Scarbro bowls while wearing a mask in Little River, S.C. on
Jan. 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Laura Bargfeld)
His wife, Ashley Alejandro, 44, also
has myalgic encephalomyelitis. “She’s got maybe four good hours a
day,” Alejandro said. “There’s not a thing in the world I wouldn’t
do to protect those four hours.”
Alejandro changed careers during the pandemic, leaving behind “my
whole support system” so he could sell vintage books online from
home. His three children — now 20, 18 and 12 — never went back to
in-person school after lockdowns ended and are continuing their
learning at home.
“We’ve really come together,” Alejandro said. “This is a choice that
can be made and you can win at it.”
In Miami, Kira Levin is the primary caregiver for her 98-year-old
grandmother. She said the thought of getting COVID-19 and risking
her grandmother’s health is terrifying.
So, at a July wedding, the 29-year-old was the only bridesmaid and
attendee in a mask — an N95 layered with a pretty mask to match the
bride’s green color scheme.
“I didn’t take off the mask for pictures and nobody asked me to,”
Levin said. “And I felt incredibly grateful for that.”
‘COVID Cautious’ dating
Denver-based sisters Jacqueline and Alexa Child stay masked while
going to concerts and dining outdoors with friends who don’t share
the same level of COVID-19 caution.
“We have done everything we possibly could to maintain our mental
health and our social life,” said Jacqueline, who has an immune
disease that makes her vulnerable to infections. “There’s nothing
worse than being disabled and isolated. As someone who has been
disabled and isolated, I don’t want that isolation part.”
Jacqueline, 30, and her sister Alexa, 34, launched a dating app
called Dateability in 2022 for people who are disabled or
chronically ill, though all are welcomed. Users can add a “COVID
Cautious” tag to their profiles to signal they’re interested in
meeting others who take precautions. The Child sisters say 10% of
their 30,000 users add “COVID Cautious” to their dating profiles.
“It’s a market that we didn’t expect to target but we happily
accept,” Jacqueline said.
Alexa said the precautions started as a way to protect Jacqueline,
“but they’re no longer about that.” She’s trying to avoid long COVID,
a long-term disability.
Tossing aside the threat of long COVID is hard to imagine for Yale
University immunologist Akiko Iwasaki. Though people have been
studying the virus since its emergence, she said scientists still
don’t know how pieces of the virus can stick around in the blood of
some people for more than a year after they’ve recovered from the
illness.
Iwasaki still wears masks indoors and stays up to date with
vaccines.
“I just can’t afford to get sick and become chronically ill,” she
said. “I feel that we really are in a position to be able to better
understand the disease, to help millions of people.”
A new normal
While Scarbro understands that others are ready to return to
“normal,” it’s not that easy for her or her family. It's true for
many others with chronic immune illnesses, said Jorey Berry, CEO of
Immune Deficiency Foundation.
“While the rest of the world is able to kind of go back to their
regular lives, our community doesn’t have that luxury,” she said.
Scarbro, her husband and children are constantly taking into account
other people’s COVID-19 safety practices.
And as the world turns back to pre-COVID life, Scarbro's family is
doing what they can to keep her healthy — but not in complete
isolation.
“I feel very scared about the future,” she said. “I know that people
are done, and I respect that, but it’s only going to make it harder
for me and my family to keep me safe.”
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AP videojournalist Laura Bargfeld contributed to this report from
Sunset Beach, North Carolina.
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