A chest X-ray of a COVID-19 patient shows "consolidation," a radiological term refering to dense opacities obscuring lung vessels and bronchial walls. (File photo from the Zakarpattia Centre of Lung Diseases, Uzhhorod, western Ukraine, Photo: SerhiiHudak/Barcroft Media Via Getty Images / ©Ukrinform
Photo: SerhiiHudak/Barcroft Media Via Getty Images
A chest X-ray of a COVID-19 patient shows "consolidation," a radiological term refering to dense opacities obscuring lung vessels and bronchial walls. (File photo from the Zakarpattia Centre of Lung Diseases, Uzhhorod, western Ukraine,
Most people who catch the new coronavirus don’t experience severe symptoms, and some have no symptoms at all. COVID-19 saves its worst for relatively few.
ICU nurse Sherie Antoinette has seen the serious cases first hand.
The lucky ones — if you can call them that — recover, but not in the sense that their lives are back to normal. For some, the damage is permanent. Their organs will never fully heal.