/Utah Family Shares Regret Over Not Getting COVID-19 Vaccine

Utah Family Shares Regret Over Not Getting COVID-19 Vaccine

UTAH COUNTY — A Utah County woman was convinced her faith-based decision to keep her family-of-six unvaccinated was right, but that feeling didn’t last long after her husband contracted a severe case of COVID-19. Now, he’s fighting for his life in the hospital.

Months ago, Mindy Greene’s husband, Russell, told her to decide what the family should do: vaccine or no vaccine.

She prayed about it and said she went forward with her answer: the family would be fine without it.

She felt good about it. Even when her two sons came home from summer camp with the Delta variant, she still felt like she had made the right decision.

“Even four or five days into it, I texted one of my friends. I’m like, ‘This ain’t bad,’” Mindy told KSL-TV.

That feeling didn’t last.

“Then, my husband got it,” said Mindy.

That’s when everything changed. Within four days, Russell was in the ICU.

That was July 1. He hasn’t been home since.

“When you come in, we call it COVID Row,” described Mindy. “Right now, we’re one of the lucky ones because my husband is still alive.”

Mindy shared her story because she said she knows there are so many others just like her who have been deceived by bad information from so-called experts online.

“I do believe it’s really hard to get an answer when the noise around you is so loud,” she said.

Mindy said she regrets that decision every minute of every day as she watches her once strong, healthy, outgoing 42-year old husband fight for his life.

“My husband was perfectly healthy,” she said with an exhausted look on her face.

She’s spent every day of the last six weeks by her husband’s side.

Russell has six chest-tubes, his lungs have holes where they’ve collapsed, and just Wednesday, he had another major surgery. A surgery, she said, doctors informed her afterwards, they were surprised he survived.

And while she’s been filled with regret, when they arrived at their first ICU in early July, she was mad.

Russell had some strong words for her.

“My husband told me, ‘You need to have faith that Jesus Christ still lives and miracles still happen or I won’t make it out alive,’” said Mindy.

So, she begrudgingly pushed forward with faith.

“I can tell you now, he was right that day,” she said.

Over the past several weeks, Mindy has come forward on social media, sharing her message of regret.

The New York Times flew to Utah to interview her.

She believes her husband knew far more than she did.

That article had more than a million views, and Mindy’s inbox has been flooded with messages of hope and prayer, which have buoyed her up and built her faith.

“I want people to know, that even in hard times, Christ lives, that miracles still happen, and that he’s still trying to protect us and he’s there to lift people that need to be lifted,” she said.

If she had to do it all over again, Mindy said she would get her family vaccinated, and she hopes others will look to credible sources, like trusted doctors and healthcare workers.

She believes people will change their anti-vaccine minds when they have accurate information.

If her faith was shaken, that moment is over as, she said, she sees daily miracles in her husband’s treatment.

“I still have those moments where I know he’s gonna be OK,” she said.

Her advice to those still vaccine-resistant isn’t overbearing or judgmental.

“Educate yourself with facts and then make the decision. Include the Lord in that process and he will help guide you,” said Mindy. “But, you can not make an educated decision on fear and lies.”

The doctor treating Russell believes he will pull through, but it’s still going to be a months-long recovery.

A GoFundMe* account has been set up to help cover the family’s medical bills.

*KSL-TV does not assure that the money deposited to the account will be applied for the benefit of the persons named as beneficiaries. If you are considering a deposit to the account, you should consult your own advisors and otherwise proceed at your own risk.