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'She did it for the people': Family mourns nurse who died from COVID-19

'She did it for the people': Family mourns nurse who died from COVID-19
FRASER MET WITH HER FAMILY. QUANECIA: DOZENS GATHER AT THE THOMAS FUNERAL HOME TO HONOR THE LIFE OF A WOMAN WHO EMBODIED SELFLESSNESS. >> IF YOU NEEDED A CHANCE TO START OVER OR IF YOU WERE GOING THROUGH TOUGH TIMES, YOU ALWAYS HAVE A PLACE TO STAY. QUANECIA FROM THE BEDSIDE TO THE HOME, HER CHILDREN SAID SHE NEVER STOPPED HELPING THOSE AROUND HER. HER DREAM OF BEING A NURSE CAME TRUE IN 1983. >> MY MOM DID NOT DO IT FOR THE MONEY. QUANECIA: HER DAY-TO-DAY LIFE INTENSIFIED ONCE THE PANDEMIC HIT THE METRO. WHEN HER CHILDREN SAY SHE STARTED TREATING COVID-19 PATIENTS -- >> HER SEEING PEOPLE DYING EVERY DAY. HER TAKING CARE OF THESE PEOPLE AND SCARED SHE IS GOING TO GET SICK. QUANECIA: HER DAUGHTER SAYS THE FEAR BECAME A REALITY. THE SECOND WEEK OF NOVEMBER, NEW AND STARTED EXPERIENCING COVID-19 SYMPTOMS. >> BEFORE SHE WENT TO THE HOSPITAL, YOU COULD TELL SHE WAS IN A LOT OF PHYSICAL PAIN. I WAS RUNNING ALL OVER THE PLACE TRYING TO GET COUGH MEDICINE OR GETTING ANYTHING SHE TOLD ME TO GET. QUANECIA: ON NOVEMBER 15, THE 57-YEAR-OLD NURSE TESTED POSITIVE FOR COVID-19, AND NINE DAYS LATER, SHE TOOK HER LAST BREATH. >> SEEING THE NURSES AND THE DOCTORS CRYING IN THE HALLWAYS BROKE ME. QUANECIA: NOW, HER CHILDREN ARE HOLDING ONTO MEMORIES. >> IF MY MOM TAUGHT ME ANYTHING, SHE TAUGHT ME TO BE A GOOD PERSON. QUANECIA: SOME OF THE MOST IMPORTANT LESSONS A MOTHER COULD TEACH. ONE OF HER SONS SAYS HE DID NOT BELIEVE IN THE VIRUS AT FIRST BUT THAT HAS CHANGED. NEWTONS HAS BEEN IS ALSO IN THE HOSPITAL FIGHTING COVID-19 RIGHT NOW. THE FAMILY WILL LAY THE NURSE
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'She did it for the people': Family mourns nurse who died from COVID-19
Daphne Newton spent the past eight months on the COVID-19 pandemic frontlines, treating patients at CHI Health Immanuel Hospital in Omaha, Nebraska. Newton caught the virus and died last week.Dozens gathered Saturday to honor the life of the woman who embodied selflessness."If you needed a chance to start over, if you were going through tough times in life, you always had a place to stay with her," her daughter Kaylee Weaver said.Newton's children say she never stopped helping those around her. She became a nurse in 1983. "My momma didn't do it for the money. She did it for the people," her son, Keith, said.Once the pandemic hit, Newton's day-to-day life intensified when she started treating COVID-19 patients, according to her children."The first day that she worked on that floor she came home crying," Keith said.Weaver reflected on "her seeing people dying every day, her taking care of these people, scared she's going to get sick, scared she's going to get her family sick."Weaver said that fear became a reality by the second week of November when Newton started experiencing symptoms."Before she went to the hospital, you can tell she was in a lot of physical pain," Weaver said. "I was running all over the place trying to get cough medicine, and just getting whatever she told me to get." On Nov. 15, the 57-year-old nurse tested positive for COVID-19. Nine days later, she took her last breath."Seeing the nurses and the doctors come out of there crying in the hallways, it hit me hard," her son, Kelvin, said.Now, Newton's children are holding on to memories and some of the most important lessons a mother could teach."I think if my mom taught me anything, she taught me how to be a good person and to love people and to value people," Weaver said.Keith said he didn't believe in the virus at first, but this situation has been an eye-opener.Newton's husband is also fighting COVID-19 in the hospital.The family will lay the nurse to rest in her home state of Oklahoma on Dec. 2.

Daphne Newton spent the past eight months on the COVID-19 pandemic frontlines, treating patients at CHI Health Immanuel Hospital in Omaha, Nebraska. Newton caught the virus and died last week.

Dozens gathered Saturday to honor the life of the woman who embodied selflessness.

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"If you needed a chance to start over, if you were going through tough times in life, you always had a place to stay with her," her daughter Kaylee Weaver said.

Newton's children say she never stopped helping those around her. She became a nurse in 1983.

"My momma didn't do it for the money. She did it for the people," her son, Keith, said.

Once the pandemic hit, Newton's day-to-day life intensified when she started treating COVID-19 patients, according to her children.

"The first day that she worked on that floor she came home crying," Keith said.

Weaver reflected on "her seeing people dying every day, her taking care of these people, scared she's going to get sick, scared she's going to get her family sick."

Weaver said that fear became a reality by the second week of November when Newton started experiencing symptoms.

"Before she went to the hospital, you can tell she was in a lot of physical pain," Weaver said. "I was running all over the place trying to get cough medicine, and just getting whatever she told me to get."

On Nov. 15, the 57-year-old nurse tested positive for COVID-19. Nine days later, she took her last breath.

"Seeing the nurses and the doctors come out of there crying in the hallways, it hit me hard," her son, Kelvin, said.

Now, Newton's children are holding on to memories and some of the most important lessons a mother could teach.

"I think if my mom taught me anything, she taught me how to be a good person and to love people and to value people," Weaver said.

Keith said he didn't believe in the virus at first, but this situation has been an eye-opener.

Newton's husband is also fighting COVID-19 in the hospital.

The family will lay the nurse to rest in her home state of Oklahoma on Dec. 2.