Welcome to your life after COVID-19. Meet your guide, Renee Still.
“Hi there!” she says with a voice that simultaneously hits 10s on gauges for volume and warmth. You meet her when you first enter the dedicated vaccination site at Penn State Health Holy Spirit Medical Center. Still is the last stop between you and the vaccine everyone hopes will send the year-old pandemic into history’s ash bin. Once you’re inside the tent, Still tells you where to sit to get your shot.
Her eyes are smiling above her surgical mask and beneath her close-clipped mop of rust-colored hair. “It used to be long curls,” she’ll tell you, but don’t look at the Penn State Health ID she’s wearing for a glimpse of her old hair. In that photo, Still stares defiantly into the camera under a skullcap to hide one of the side effects of her chemotherapy.
“Cancer is a pain in the keister,” Still said. It’s her third wrestling match with it. The first was 18 years ago. Her latest positive test came two years ago. She just finished her fifth chemotherapy treatment at Hershey Medical Center and is soon due for a test to determine how much good it did.
Still has worked for Holy Spirit for the past 27 years as a medical assistant. Her most recent gig in the Medical Center’s presurgery clinic was to help prepare patients for dates with scalpels. She took vitals, blood samples and EKG scans. Still has all the prerequisites for the job. She loves people, particularly meeting new ones and sharing with them the laughs which for her come easily.
When the pandemic arrived, Still’s doctors told her she couldn’t touch COVID-19 with a 10-foot pole because of the toll cancer and treatment had taken on her immune system. So, to protect her, the Medical Center moved her to the basement of the Camp Hill facility, miles from the worst of the coronavirus, where she worked screening contractors entering the building for COVID-like symptoms.
The blow was twofold. Not only couldn’t Still visit with the patients she loved, she was also sidelined during the biggest health crisis of the past hundred years.
But Still rolled with it. “I learned a lot. I met fascinating people,” she says of her time in the basement. “For the first time, I really learned how the hospital operates.”