BELIEVE IN THE VACCINE UNTIL NOW. SHE HAS THE URGENT PLETOA GET VACCINATED. >> INSTEAD OF CELEBRATING A WEDDING ANNIVERSARY, CHEYNE SATTER SPENT IT IN THE ICU OF ST. ANTHONY HOSPITAL. HE IS IN A COMA AND ON A VENTILATOR DUE TO COVID-19. >> WE바카라 게임 웹사이트RE WORKING PEOPLE WEAY P OUR TAXES WE GO TO WORK, WE COME HOME. WE바카라 게임 웹사이트RE NORMAL PEOPLE, ANITD COULD HAPPEN TO US. >> CHEYENE SATTER HASN바카라 게임 웹사이트T ENBE HOME FOR THE LAST 12 DAYS, SO HIS WIFE LIZ SENDS HIM TEXT MESSAG.ES >> EVERY DAY, EVERY NIGHT TEI LL HIM LIKE HOW MY DAY WENT AND, CWEAME AND SAW HIM AND I JUST IT KIND OF KEEPS ME CLOSE TO HIM. I IMAGINED MYSELF MANY MANY TIMES TRYING TO TELL MY SON, THAT HIS DADDY WASN바카라 게임 웹사이트T COMING HOME. AND THAT WAS REALLY HA.RD >> HE바카라 게임 웹사이트S NOW IN THE FOR HIS LIFE AGAINST A COVID-19 INDUCED PNEUMONIA. >> FRIDAY HE WAS SAYINHEG WASN바카라 게임 웹사이트T FEELING GO.OD BY TUESDAY, HE HAD 100 HIGH FEVER. BY SATURDAY, HE WAS INHE T HOSPITAL ON A VENTILATOR SO IT JUST, IT MOVES FAST AND IT DOESN바카라 게임 웹사이트T ST.OP HIS BELIEF IS IF HE WAS GOING TO GET COVID THAT HE WOULD HAVE GOT IT ALREA.DY >> SO CHEYENE DID NOT GET VACCINATED. >> WHEN THE SHOTS CAME OUTMY, HUSBAND AND EVEN MYSELF WERE LIKE DEAD SET LIKE NO WE D'O바카라 게임 웹사이트T NEED THE SHOT I바카라 게임 웹사이트VE ALREADY HAD COVID. >> LIZ SHARING HER HUSBAND바카라 게임 웹사이트S STORY, BECAUSE HE CANNOT. >> THE LAST TWO WEEKS HAVE BEEN HELL. WE WERE THAT FAMILY THAT THOUGHT IT WOULD NEVER HAPPEN TO US. AND THAT, THAT바카라 게임 웹사이트S KIND OF WHAT WOULD HIT ME THE HARDE.ST WHAT IF WE COULD HAVE DONE THI SBETTER? WHAT IF I HAD JUST MADE HIMET G THE SHOT? >> SINCE OUR INTERVIEW THIS MORNING, CHEYENE바카라 게임 웹사이트S X-RAY SHOWED INCREASING PNEUMON.IA AS FOR RECOVERY, HE바카라 게임 웹사이트S LOOKING AT ANOTHER 3 TO 6 MONTHS IN THE HOSPITAL WITHOUT PHYSILCA THERY.AP YOU CAN바카라 게임 웹사이트T CHANGE THE STRONG OPINIONS BUT YOU CAN HELP THE PEOPLE THAT ARE ON THE FENCE. >> THAT바카라 게임 웹사이트S YOUR WHOLE G
Man who didn't believe in vaccine fighting for his life with COVID-19-induced pneumonia
Updated: 6:37 AM EDT Jul 29, 2021
Cheyne Satter, a 27-year-old man from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, is fighting for his life as he has spent the last 12 days in a hospital with COVID-19-induced pneumonia. His wife told sister station KOCO he did not believe in the vaccine until now. Instead of celebrating a wedding anniversary, Cheyne spent it on a ventilator and in a coma at St. Anthony Hospital's intensive care unit due to COVID-19."We're working people. We pay our taxes. We go to work. We come home," Liz Satter said. "We're normal people, and it could happen to us."Cheyne hasn't been home for almost two weeks, so his wife, Liz, sends him text messages. "Every day, every night, I tell him how my day went. And, you know, we came and saw him. It kind of keeps me close to him," Liz said. "I imagined myself many, many times trying to tell my son that his daddy wasn't coming home, and that was really hard." Cheyne is now in the fight for his life against COVID-19-induced pneumonia."That Friday, he was saying he wasn't feeling good. And then, by Tuesday, he had a 105 fever," Liz said. "And then, by Saturday, he was in the hospital on a ventilator. So, it moves fast, and it doesn't stop."His belief, according to Liz, was "if he was going to get COVID, then he would have got it already."So, Cheyne didn't get vaccinated."When the shots came out, my husband, and even myself, were like dead-set, like, no, we don't need the shot. I've already had COVID," Liz said.Liz is sharing her husband's story because he cannot.Liz now pleads with others to get the vaccine."We were that family that thought it would never happen to us. That's kind of what would hit me the hardest," Liz said. "What if we could have done this better? What if I would have just made him go get the shot? What if we didn't spend so much time arguing about it? What if? He probably wouldn't be in the position he's in today."Since speaking with KOCO Wednesday morning, Cheyne's X-ray showed increasing pneumonia. As for his recovery, he's looking at another three to six months in the hospital, and that's without physical therapy."You can't change the strong opinions, but you can help the people that are on the fence," Liz said.
OKLAHOMA CITY — Cheyne Satter, a 27-year-old man from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, is fighting for his life as he has spent the last 12 days in a hospital with COVID-19-induced pneumonia.
His wife told sister station KOCO he did not believe in the vaccine until now.
Instead of celebrating a wedding anniversary, Cheyne spent it on a ventilator and in a coma at St. Anthony Hospital's intensive care unit due to COVID-19.
"We're working people. We pay our taxes. We go to work. We come home," Liz Satter said. "We're normal people, and it could happen to us."
Cheyne hasn't been home for almost two weeks, so his wife, Liz, sends him text messages.
"Every day, every night, I tell him how my day went. And, you know, we came and saw him. It kind of keeps me close to him," Liz said. "I imagined myself many, many times trying to tell my son that his daddy wasn't coming home, and that was really hard."
Cheyne is now in the fight for his life against COVID-19-induced pneumonia.
"That Friday, he was saying he wasn't feeling good. And then, by Tuesday, he had a 105 fever," Liz said. "And then, by Saturday, he was in the hospital on a ventilator. So, it moves fast, and it doesn't stop."
His belief, according to Liz, was "if he was going to get COVID, then he would have got it already."
So, Cheyne didn't get vaccinated.
"When the shots came out, my husband, and even myself, were like dead-set, like, no, we don't need the shot. I've already had COVID," Liz said.
Liz is sharing her husband's story because he cannot.
Liz now pleads with others to get the vaccine.
"We were that family that thought it would never happen to us. That's kind of what would hit me the hardest," Liz said. "What if we could have done this better? What if I would have just made him go get the shot? What if we didn't spend so much time arguing about it? What if? He probably wouldn't be in the position he's in today."
Since speaking with KOCO Wednesday morning, X-ray showed increasing pneumonia. As for his recovery, he's looking at another three to six months in the hospital, and that's without physical therapy.
"You can't change the strong opinions, but you can help the people that are on the fence," Liz said.