This Hamilton man stuck in hospital with COVID-19 is now behind on rent and car payments - Action News
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This Hamilton man stuck in hospital with COVID-19 is now behind on rent and car payments

Delio Delgado has spent more than a month in hospital battling COVID-19, but when he leaves, he'll have to try and catch up on missed rent and car payments.

Delio Delgado lives in a hot spot in Hamilton and wishes the province did more to get him vaccinated

Delio Delgado, 51, says he has been in the hospital since March 13 battling COVID-19 and is behind on rent as he tries to survive in a Hamilton hospital. (Bobby Hristova/CBC)

When Delio Delgado turns 51 on Wednesday, he'll beinside a Hamilton hospital battlingCOVID-19.

"I was hoping that tomorrow would be a happier day," he said.

But his birthday almost didn't come.

Since mid-March, he's been fighting a virus that nearly killed him.

And whilehe'son a long road to recovery now,when Delgadoleaves the hospital, he'll have another uphill battle the Dominican-born Hamiltonian has fallen behind on rent and car payments.

"I'm not doing very well," Delgado said about his finances from his hospital bed duringan interview on Tuesday morning.

"I had to stop the lease of the car, I had to stop insuring the car ... I'm an industrial and residential painter ... my car gets me my income."

Delio Delgado lives in a hot spot in Hamilton and wishes vaccines could have come sooner. Now, he's in the hospital with COVID-19 and will return home in debt. (Submitted by Delio Delgado )

And Delgado said hisdriver's licencewas suspended because he was unable to do a requiredphysical exam, which he worries will jack up his insurance when he's ready to drive.

But Delgado said he's thankfulto be breathing, even if it doesn't come easy.

From home to induced comain a matter of days

Delgado said he worked at Hamilton General Hospital as a painter during most of the pandemic, which allowed him to learn a lot about the virus and staying safe.

He eventually stopped working there and was on unemployment insurance before his life changed in March.

Delgado isn't sure how he got the virus, but he lives in one of Hamilton's hot spot neighbourhoods. His area, with the L8N postal code, was recently given vaccine priority.

WATCH: Hamilton man describes emotional moments in ICU with COVID

Hamilton man describes emotional moments in ICU with COVID-19

3 years ago
Duration 1:44
Delio Delgado, 51, describes what it was like to be in the intensive care unit with COVID-19.

On March 13, after feeling a few symptoms he thought could be COVID-19, Delgado said he had uncontrollable diarrhea.

That's when he said he decided to go to the emergency room at St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton.

Delgado said he was immediately given oxygen and put into the intensive care unit (ICU).

"I got into ICU and it was like a hurricane, I got like four or five nurses around me and everyone is doing a different task, and I remember, 'What is his oxygen level? What is his oxygen level? He's not doing very well,' that's what I'm hearing," Delgado said.

"I spent three or four days like that."

Staff at Hamilton Health Sciences don personal protective equipment during the COVID-19 pandemic. (Hamilton Health Sciences)

While he was in the ICU, Delgado said he had a quiet moment with his doctor.

"My doctor at the time, she stopped at the door of the ICU. It was all glass. She can see through ...I was just passing out almost and I put my hand on my heart and I tapped it like ... 'I appreciate what you're doing, saving my life,'" Delgado said, tearing up.

"Thebeautiful thing, that gave me a smile on my heart, wasshe [pulled down] her mask and gave me a smile and she also tapped her heart back."

Shortly after, Delgado entered an induced coma.

He's unsure when he woke up, but Degaldo said he was on a ventilator and a liquid diet. Then he saiddoctors told him he'd be leaving the ICU and beginning his road to recovery.

Delgado said his cousin came to visit him that day and said they heard on March 27 he only had half an hour to live.

"Miraculously, I got out of the dark days," he said.

Provinceshould've rolled out vaccines sooner, Delgado says

Now he's thinking about leaving the hospital but he'll have to deal with those missed payments, which he said are roughly$1,250 a month.

In Delgado's case, a group of friends and local artists started a fundraiserto help him avoid being overwhelmed with debt when he leaves.

Ingrid Mayrhofer, one of his friends who startedthe GoFundMe page, said it's been four days and they've raised nearly $4,000 of their $5,000 goal.

"He's the first person I actually know who was infected ... It's definitely hit home," she said.

"I'm really grateful for how the arts community has come together in support of Delio."

WATCH:Ford blames lack of vaccines for COVID-19 crisis, should he?

Ford blames lack of vaccines for COVID-19 crisis, should he?

4 years ago
Duration 2:14
CBCs chief political correspondent Rosemary Barton assesses Premier Doug Fords claim that Ontarios COVID-19 crisis is largely because its not getting enough vaccines from Ottawa.

Delgado said the Ford government needs to do more to help COVID-19 survivors avoid financial hardship.

"I don't know what the measures could've been because everybody's situation is different ... I don't think they're doing the best job with this pandemic either," he said.

One thing he wishes happened sooner was lowering the age limits for people to get doses of vaccines like AstraZeneca and reaching hot spot communities sooner.

"We know this pandemic is affecting more marginalized and people of colour than any other demographic," he said Tuesday.

"Everything should've happened sooner."

Family, painting and religion fuelfor recovery

Delgadosaid he became religious because of his time in the ICU.

After he's back home, Delgado said hewants to spend time with his mother, who plans on coming from the Dominican Republic.

He also said he's excitedto see his American bulldog,Useey, his 10-year-old son,Samuel, and start painting again.

"That's my fuel," Delgado said.