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n PUBLIC NOTICES
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Pg. 27
MAY 14, 2020
NOVA Reopening Delayed; Some Supervisors Disagree BY RENSS GREENE
rgreene@loudounnow.com
Patrick Szabo/Loudoun Now
A group of eight nurses accompany Sterling Volunteer Rescue Squad President Sam Neglia as he’s wheeled out of the Inova Loudoun Hospital after a 28day stay for COVID-19 treatment.
Loudoun First Responder Returns Home After 28-Day COVID-19 Hospitalization BY PATRICK SZABO
pszabo@loudounnow.com
An early birthday present for one of Loudoun’s volunteer first responders was a trip home from the hospital after nearly a month-long stay for COVID-19 treatment. Sam Neglia, an eight-year volunteer with the Sterling Volunteer Rescue Squad and the squad’s president, was released from the Inova Loudoun Hospital in Lansdowne on Tuesday evening, just 18 days before his 60th birthday. According to Clinical Director Debbie Toland, Neglia spent 28 days in the hospital, more than
two weeks of which was spent in the Intensive Care Unit, followed by a final week of rehabilitation and ambulation in Toland’s 26 Main Unit. Toland said that when Neglia was transferred to her unit, he was still “very critically ill,” with a chest tube still attached to his body. “He was pretty sick,” she said. Toland said it was exciting to see Neglia go home and that “it gives you a kind of boost to keep going.” “It’s encouraging,” she said. Loudoun County Combined Fire & Rescue System Chief Keith Johnson said Neglia contracted the virus on March 31
while transporting a COVID-19-positive patient to the hospital. Johnson said none of the first responders knew the patient was infected at that time. Johnson said it’s not clear when Neglia will be able to return to his duties as a volunteer, but that it would most likely “be a while.” He said COVID-19 is presenting first responders with a new kind of risk that can’t be seen. Toland said she has cared for more than a hundred COVID-19 patients since the outbreak began two months ago and that every one of them exhibits different symptoms. n
Gov. Ralph Northam will allow Northern Virginia localities including Loudoun to delay a cautious reopening of businesses until as late as May 29, while the rest of Virginia prepares to begin that reopening this Friday. Northam’s phase one of his plan “Forward Virginia” would still look a lot like the current restrictions on businesses and social gatherings. Businesses like salons and barbershops would be open only by appointment. Restaurants, breweries and wineries would be allowed to welcome back customers, but only outside, only at half of their normal outdoors capacity, and with six-foot distancing enforced. Fitness centers can reopen, but like restaurants, only outside. But Northam has also said localities may adopt even stricter rules, and on Tuesday announced he will allow leaders from those regions to formally request to remain in “phase zero,” the current regime of enforced social distancing and business closures. That followed letters over the weekend from elected leaders and health officials warning Northam that the region was not ready to reopen. County Chairwoman Phyllis J. Randall (D-At Large) said DELAYED OPENING continues on page 34
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