
Dr. Kurt Papenfus in 2020. He’s the CEO of Keefe Memorial Hospital in Cheyenne Wells, Colo.
Dr. Kurt Papenfus
conceal caption
toggle caption
Dr. Kurt Papenfus
As we mark 5 years on from the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic this month, life has modified for many individuals, in methods each mundane and profound.
Dr. Kurt Papenfus is somebody NPR interviewed in 2020. The CEO of a small hospital in rural Colorado, Papenfus first took care of COVID sufferers, then he grew to become one. He advised us the story of driving himself to Denver — with an escort of sheriff’s deputies to ensure he made it — so he may get the intensive care he knew he wanted for COVID pneumonia.
“The ‘rona beast is a really nasty beast,” he stated again then. “It has a really imply mood. It loves a battle, and it likes to hold coming after you.”
Papenfus now praises the funding in analysis that, he believes, superior science by a long time in only a few years. Personally, he has struggled with the mind fog of lengthy COVID, and he has realized a lesson about conserving his vitality.
“COVID was a harsh reminder that, ‘Yeah, you higher care for your self. If you cannot care for your self, how are you going to care for different individuals?'” Papenfus says.
Listed below are 5 extra examples of classes we have now realized and issues COVID modified completely, although it isn’t an exhaustive checklist:
1. Video calls made the room greater, distances shorter.
Has this occurred to you? You are watching one thing on Netflix from, say, 2018. There is a video convention name within the story line and it is introduced as one thing odd, cool, uncommon.
The pandemic modified that for everybody.
Zoom and different video convention apps grew to become a typical a part of enterprise and private life.
Regardless of the occasional frozen display glitches and folk becoming a member of calls of their ratty pajamas, there are upsides.
Beth Hendrix, govt director of the League of Ladies Voters of Colorado, stated using distant conferencing led her group to change into actually statewide. It allowed extra significant participation for folk from the jap plains to the west facet of Colorado, known as the Western Slope.
Earlier than, all their conferences had been in particular person, which “saved people outdoors of the metro from actually collaborating in management actions. So that’s one optimistic factor.”
Michael Dougherty, Boulder County’s district legal professional, noticed the same silver lining: Digital courtroom proceedings allowed much more individuals to participate.
“We even have victims who’re scared to be in the identical room as a defendant or his family members,” he stated. “They now can attend courtroom nearly with out the defendant even realizing they’re there.”
2. Pandemic pups introduced us two-legged mates, too.
Many individuals grew to become pet homeowners for the primary time through the pandemic. Grace Markley, from Denver, stated one of many shocking and delightful issues of the disaster was “we ended up adopting a miniature bernedoodle.”
She met neighbors who additionally adopted pandemic canines. They frolicked outdoors, socialized over potlucks and comfortable hours, linked over the canines and fashioned what they known as their Doodlefest. It grew to become an everyday gathering, a vacation card that includes poodle-mix doggos, and a gaggle chat. “And to this point there are 22 of us on the chat,” Markley stated.

A bernedoodle is a canine that may be a cross between a poodle and a Bernese mountain canine.
Cavan Pictures/iStockphoto/Getty Pictures
conceal caption
toggle caption
Cavan Pictures/iStockphoto/Getty Pictures
“This a part of city is simply alive with pandemic puppies. In order that was one thing that was actually particular for us. And 5 years in, we’re nonetheless going robust,” Markley stated.
3. Well being inequities had been uncovered and so was vaccine hesitancy.
COVID uncovered stark inequities in each society and the well being system.
Julissa Soto, a well being fairness marketing consultant, helped each highlight and deal with them at a whole lot of clinics round Colorado.
One occasion was at Ascension Catholic Parish in Denver’s Montbello neighborhood, the place in 2021, she advised the masked congregation that COVID-19 vaccines are protected, efficient and out there.
“I am on a mission to get my group vaccinated, and I cannot cease till I get the final Latino vaccinated,” she stated on the time.
Over the course of the pandemic, she helped get about 60,000 individuals vaccinated, by her depend, at greater than 400 vaccine clinics and occasions just like the one at Ascension Catholic Church.

A vaccination occasion in December 2021 in Denver’s Montbello neighborhood organized by Julissa Soto. She estimates she helped 60,000 individuals get their COVID photographs.
Hart Van Denburg/CPR Information
conceal caption
toggle caption
Hart Van Denburg/CPR Information
Quick ahead to 2025, and Soto says it is essential to recollect how many individuals had been misplaced.
“Actually unhappy, heaps and plenty of individuals died,” she stated in an interview.
In Colorado, the quantity of people that died surpassed 16,000 individuals, in line with figures reported by the CDC. Greater than 1.2 million individuals died throughout the nation.
Most Coloradans obtained vaccinated, however the Latino group, which was hit arduous by the virus, barely obtained to a 50% vaccination price, Soto stated. The low price offered her “a chance to focus on the inequities. They’ve at all times existed in public well being.”
Throughout the 2024-2025 respiratory virus season, lower than 25% of Colorado adults obtained the up to date COVID-19 vaccine.
Among the many classes Soto stated she realized within the pandemic: to pivot, suppose on her ft, take away limitations, problem the established order.
“I imagine that we’ll discover options,” she stated. “Keep in mind from each setback, it will likely be a comeback.”
4. The classroom modified, and challenges set in.
For some, the darkish clouds of the pandemic nonetheless exist. Melanie Potyondy, a public college psychologist in Fort Collins, says she’s seen a troubling pattern with youngsters: “an absence of resilience, an absence of that grit, that I feel I noticed in earlier cohorts of children previous to the pandemic.”
She says they’re now faster to surrender, faster to put in writing off a instructor they do not click on with. Add in a reliance on know-how, which “compounds this diminished stage of grit in that it is really easy to cover out behind a cellphone and to not should have troublesome conversations with individuals in particular person.”
Faculties have begun experimenting with cellphone bans throughout class, however the jury remains to be out on whether or not that can remedy the educational challenges academics and college students have been reporting because the disruption of the pandemic.
5. Lengthy COVID, too, seems right here to remain.
“Onerous to imagine, 5 years later. Nonetheless in a little bit little bit of restoration mode” is how Denver resident Clarence Troutman summed up his expertise, each of getting COVID-19 after which lengthy COVID.
Troutman was a broadband technician with CenturyLink, a telecom firm, for 37 years. He caught the virus initially of the pandemic, was hospitalized and on a ventilator for a time, and ended up staying within the hospital for 2 months.
5 years on, life is a combined bag for Troutman, who needed to retire from his job due to his well being.

Clarence Troutman needed to retire on account of lengthy COVID, however he’s grateful in the present day that he feels effectively sufficient to take pleasure in visits together with his grandchildren who dwell in Atlanta.
John Daley/CPR Information
conceal caption
toggle caption
John Daley/CPR Information
“I haven’t got the neuropathy I used to have,” he says, citing a vivid spot. That is nerve injury inflicting ache, numbness or tingling.
“Type of the psychological scars of the whole lot have truthfully type of healed,” he says, noting the optimistic facet of the ledger.
However he nonetheless grapples with power fatigue, mind fog and diminished lung capability. Troutman says a protracted COVID affected person group he joined after he obtained sick nonetheless meets commonly, evaluating their experiences, supporting one another.
“We’re nonetheless a decent little group and we’re getting higher collectively,” he says.
He is began figuring out at his native rec heart, because of his bettering well being. And he stated he is nearer than ever to his son and two grandkids in Atlanta.
“I really feel actually blessed every single day once I take into consideration the those that weren’t capable of make it by this factor or modified eternally, even worse than I’m. I do know I am blessed,” he stated. “I am a really fortunate man.”
Troutman stated one other good factor was his discovery of an inside energy.
“You type of faucet right into a energy or resiliency you did not even know you had till all this occurred,” Troutman stated. “So yeah, it has been fairly the journey. Fairly the journey.”