Once anti-vaxx, New Brunswick woman pleads to unvaccinated not to follow her lead - Action News
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New Brunswick

Once anti-vaxx, New Brunswick woman pleads to unvaccinated not to follow her lead

A New Brunswick woman who was once an anti-vaxxer is now pleading with unvaccinated people to get the COVID-19 vaccine after the virus put her in the hospital.

'It's nothing to laugh about and make fun it's not just a little cold, it's a killer cold'

Linda Methot Hartley has been posting videos from her hospital room in Edmundston. Once anti-vaxx, she now pleads with people to get vaccinated. (Submitted/Facebook)

A New Brunswick woman who was anti-vaxxand spread misinformation about COVID-19vaccine on social media is now pleading with the unvaccinated to get the shot.

Linda Methot Hartley, 65, of Grand Falls said she's lucky to be alive after contracting the virus last month.

"The doctor saidone-half of a little piece of a threadI was holding for my life," she said Sundayfrom her hospital bed in Edmundston.

Methot Hartley said she had resisted getting the vaccine and shared anti-vaccination information on her Facebook page because she thought she was doing the right thing.

"People [were] in the road with some signs," she said, admitting to believing anti-vaccination protesters. "They came to Grand Falls, too."

She said she came to believe that COVID-19 vaccination "is not good for us."

Complete reversal

Methot Hartley said she believed that COVID-19 was nothing more than a cold.

Now she has completely changed her views.

Methot Hartley posted a picture of herself on Oct. 29 from hospital in Edmundston. She asked people to pray for her. (Submitted/Facebook)

"I was home sick as a dog. High fever. [I] was taking Tylenol every four hours."

After testing positive for COVID-19 about a month ago, Methot Hartley was soon admitted to hospital. She was in a coma for about 10 days.

"I'm going to tell you right now that that's why I woke up, so I'm able to tell others about the vaccine. Don't wait like me."

Contact tracers foundthat Methot Hartleypicked up the virus during a visit with a sick friend, who was also opposed to vaccination. She and her friend thought he just had a cold.

Shortly before she tested positive,Methot Hartleyhad a change of heart because she wasn't feeling well andtried to get vaccinated.

She said she tried to get the shot but was turned away because she didn't have an appointment. She thought it was a walk-in clinic.

By the time she got an appointment she had already tested positive.

Although she is still in hospital, Methot Hartleyreceived her first vaccine dose on Tuesday.

Daily struggle

She said it's been a daily struggle for her since she got sick.

"I just started to eat last week. I had a tube in my nose, tube in my throat."

She said she regrets her anti-vaccination stance.

"When you go through something like this it's nothing to laugh about and make fun it's not just a little cold, it's a killer cold."

Methot Hartley said she hopes to be released from the hospital in the coming week.