________________ OYSTER BAY _______________
COMMUNITY UPDATE Infections as of March 22
3,324
Infections as of March 12 3,129
$1.00
HERALD
Vets memorial coming soon
LVSD parents treat seniors
Friends of Bay hold beach cleanup
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VOL. 123 NO. 13
MARCH 26 - APRIL 1, 2021
Teen studies her age group’s Covid resilience at handling their stress than others,” Musso said. “And I’ve seen lots of my peers stressed about Some high school students the same things. Technology has have responded to the stresses of an impact on every part of life, the coronavirus pandemic by so I assumed those with a higher hunkering down at home in level of technology addiction front of a computer. Carmela would be less resilient.” Musso, 17, has taken Additionally, she the opposite tack. said, she has noticed The Brookville differing levels of resident, a senior at spirituality among Sacred Heart Acadeher peers. Some my, an all-girls priadhere to convenvate Catholic school, t i o n a l re l i g i o n s, has done a year-long while others have a research study on sense of “oneness,” the impact of intera belief that some net addiction and supernatural power spirituality on teen controls all of the stress. The results DR. STEPHEN events on earth. we re s i g n i f i c a n t Using standardenough that the SULLIVAN ized measures, study has been cho- Sacred Heart Musso designed a sen for publication Academy questionnaire that in a national journal identified the presof psychology. ence of these two Musso’s study, entitled, “The factors — internet addiction and effects of spirituality & technolo- spirituality — in a respondent, gy usage on the resilience of stu- and then correlated those factors dents attending faith-based insti- with the respondent’s reported tutions,“ is soon to appear in the success in dealing with stress. Walt Whitman Journal of Psy- The questionnaire was distributchology, a peer-reviewed high ed to 200 female students at school journal base at Whitman Sacred Heart and Molloy ColHigh School in Bethesda, Md. lege. Musso found that both fac“I’ve always been interested in why some people seem better CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
BY GEORGE WALLACE newsroom@liherald.com
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Mike Conn/Herald Guardian
TY GONZALEZ, 90, received his vaccine from Americare nurse Christine D’Angelo at the Life Enrichment Center of Oyster Bay.
Life Enrichment Center brings vaccine to dozens of its seniors BY MIKE CONN mconn@liherald.com
The Life Enrichment Center of Oyster Bay partnered with Americare on March 11 to provide 70 of its seniors with the Covid-19 vaccine at the center. In took less than 30 minutes for seniors to complete the process, from the time they arrived until the end of their 15 minutes in the observation area, where they
were monitored to be sure they didn’t have any side effects from the vaccine. Then they could walk out of the center with the comfort of knowing that they were one step closer to be protected from contacting Covid-19. Bridget DeSimone, the coordinator of the center’s Day Break program, which works with members with dementia and Alzheimer’s, took the lead in bringing
Americare to the center. She said the center had taken roughly 150 seniors to different vaccination sites since the inoculations became available. When she took a group of them to Americare’s vaccination center in Garden City, however, the company’s director of nursing and client services, Charlene Valentino, suggested that Americare come to the center. CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
verything [Carmela] does, she does wholeheartedly.