SACRAMENTO ā The Richard Costigan posted July 23 was bluntly honest: āWe tried our best to limit exposure to #COVID19 but we slipped up somewhere.ā
Costigan tweeted while waiting anxiously in the parking lot of a hospital outside Sacramento. The veteran Republican political consultant had just dropped his wife, Gloria, off at the emergency room. He wasnāt allowed to go in with her.
https://twitter.com/richardcostigan/status/1286523189875445760?s=20
His thoughts traveled back to the small family gathering they had attended in Georgia nearly two weeks before with their 23-year-old daughter, Emma, and 17-year-old son, Andrew. They had planned it so carefully. Nobody wanted to get Gloriaās 88-year-old mother sick.
But here they were, Costiganās wife battling for breath in the ER, and Costigan sitting in his car coughing.
The familyās journey since then has been one of sleeplessness, pain and worry about the future. And itās one that Costigan, who worked as deputy chief of staff for Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, is taking to social media and his 4,400 Twitter followers.
https://twitter.com/richardcostigan/status/1287245048027820033?s=20
Looking back, Costigan, 54, doesnāt think he and Gloria, 53, contracted the virus on their separate flights to Georgia, where the family owns a home. The flights were nearly empty and the passengers and crew wore masks, he said.
In Georgia, the family continued its regimen of social distancing and wore masks whenever they left the house ā protocols they had followed for months at home in California. And when they gathered with their relatives on that sunny Saturday in July, they were careful to space the chairs 6 feet apart in the backyard.
But they didnāt wear masks, he said, and family members went in and out of the house to grab drinks and use the restroom. āWe thought weād done everything right, and we screwed up,ā Costigan said in a July 29 phone interview. āWe made a big mistake.ā
Now seven of the 10 family members who attended that backyard gathering are sick. Emma and Andrew donāt have any symptoms but havenāt been tested. Exactly who introduced COVID-19 to the group is unclear. No one showed signs of sickness at the time. The first person to become sick was Gloriaās sister, then her niece ā then her mom.
Gloria Costigan became sick after they returned to Sacramento, spent a night in the hospital, needed an oxygen machine at home and developed COVID-related pneumonia. By Saturday, however, she no longer needed supplemental oxygen.
https://twitter.com/richardcostigan/status/1286746255893262336?s=20
Costiganās reputation as a straight shooter, respected and liked by both Democrats and Republicans, could help change minds about the virus, said Barbara OāConnor, emeritus director of the Institute for the Study of Politics and Media at California State University-Sacramento.
āI think that Richard is being very honest about whatās going on,ā said OāConnor, who has known Costigan for decades. āItās not political. Itās really human.ā
Lawmakers who have responded on Twitter with messages of support include state Controller Betty Yee, and state Sens. Richard Bloom and Steve Glazer, all Democrats. Sen. Richard Pan (D-Sacramento), a physician who chairs the Senate Health Committee, has texted well wishes to Costigan.
For his followers, Costiganās chronicles of the virus remain grim.
āI canāt go very far without needing to lay down,ā he wrote in a July 25 . āBeen sleeping constantly last two days and the joint pain is intense.ā
In another two days later, the symptoms were the same:
https://twitter.com/richardcostigan/status/1287805226053824512?s=20
Gloriaās 88-year-old mom is at home with a cough, he said.
Costigan talked to California Healthline about his familyās disease odyssey and what he hopes people will take away from his COVID-19 Twitter chronicles. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Q: You have tweeted in such detail about the horrible symptoms you experienced. How do you feel now?
My ribs just hurt with the coughing and the fatigue, and my joints hurt. I have the sweats and vivid dreams. I sleep on the floor because itās more comfortable than the bed.
This thing just hits like a ton of bricks. Itās also the nervousness of it. How long is it going to last? Who are we going to expose to it? I just donāt know what the end game is.
Q: What is it like at your house now?
I wear a mask inside, Gloria wears a mask inside, and Andrew wears a mask. Gloria is sleeping in Emmaās old bedroom, Iām in our bedroom, and Andrew stays upstairs. When Iām hacking, you can see the spit come out. Iām worried about getting pneumonia. Thatās something Iām worried about giving to my kid. Itās not just COVID.
Our daughter can only stand on our front porch. She delivers food to us. She puts it by the door, rings the bell and stands 6 feet back.
Q: You suspect you got COVID from the family gathering in Georgia. How do you trace it to that event?
When we looked at everybody that was at the gathering, we were trying to figure it out. It started with my sister-in-law getting sick. Out of 10 of us, seven of us are sick.
We never thought of our family being the one to harm us. Sometimes, you canāt control your anger. You want to be mad at someone. Gloria and I just decided weāre not going to blame anyone. We just donāt know who had it.
Q: How has this experience been so far for you and your family?
Itās been a bizarre week. I went to Kaiser Thursday night. You drop your significant other off. You canāt go in. Off they go to the tented area and I wait in the parking lot. She is admitted. Her oxygen levels are low. She gets a CT, she gets a shot in her stomach for possible blood clots. She gets out Friday and they send oxygen tanks to your house. ⦠Sheās in her early 50s and doesnāt have any health issues [otherwise].
Saturday, my son is doubling over in pain. I end up in the ER with my son, and I start coughing. Iām getting the side eye from everyone. Thankfully, he had a kidney stone.
Q: What kind of precautions have you and your family taken these past few months?
We hadnāt been anywhere for months. It was: Stay home. Work from home. No school.
Going to the store was extremely stressful. You go to the store, mask up, glove up, you bleach your shoes when you come home, spray down your car, wash your hands, use a towel to dry your hands, the towel goes straight into the washing machine.
Our son got frustrated with us because we wouldnāt let him see his friends. He saw photos of friends of his partying at Folsom Lake. We were the hardcore parents.
Q: In posts on social media, you are asking people to wear a mask. Why do you think itās become a political issue?
Iāve been taking flak from friends of mine because Iāve been posting āwear a mask.ā Wearing a mask ā somehow it has become a freedom issue. Itās not a grand conspiracy. Wearing a mask is a simple thing to do to prevent someone else from getting sick. I do not understand how this has turned into a political issue. The government has a role to play. This is a health care crisis.
https://twitter.com/richardcostigan/status/1287234903659040769?s=20 Q: How do you move forward in this pandemic?
Weāre locking down. Nobody is coming into our circle. I donāt want it again. To see my wife this way is hard.
I want folks to realize this thing is non-discriminatory. It doesnāt matter who you are.
Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņīl Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFFāan independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .