SA国际传

漏 2026 SA国际传谋
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

COVID-19 Death Inspires Immokalee Health Fair

Families stand in line at a health fair hosted by the  Redlands Christian Migrant Association in Immokalee on Dec. 5.
Andrea Perdomo
/
WGCU
Families stand in line at a health fair hosted by the Redlands Christian Migrant Association in Immokalee on Dec. 5.

The unexpected death of the brother of long-time Redlands Christian Migrant Association, or RCMA, employee Gloria Padilla motivated her to create a community health fair in Immokalee.

Immokalee resident Gloria Padilla comes from a big, tight-knit Mexican family that relishes in sharing meals and laughs together.

One of their gatherings, that took place before the pandemic, is captured in a video where Padilla鈥檚 brother, Bernabe Martinez Jr. plays the guitar and sings a song with their mother.

COVID-19 has hit Padilla鈥檚 family hard--Martinez died from complications of the virus in July.

Padilla鈥檚 sister tested positive for COVID-19 and shortly after, so did her mother and brother.

鈥淪o when my mom and brother first tested positive, my mother ended up in the hospital but she had different symptoms which, thank God, they were stomach related versus the upper respiratory, and my brother was fine. He had no symptoms whatsoever,鈥 Padilla said.

Martinez was their mother鈥檚 caretaker, so after he quarantined and tested negative for COVID-19, Padilla visited them.

鈥淗e was an amazing, amazing cook,鈥 Padilla said. 鈥淗e had made breakfast for us that morning, and he was fine. That Sunday was the last time that I saw him physically, because he did this great thing. Every night he would sing to [the family], he would send us a video of him singing, and then they stopped because he was feeling sick and he ended up in the hospital. That was the end.鈥

Padilla said Martinez was put on a ventilator and tested positive for COVID. She said doctors told the family her brother鈥檚 blood had thickened causing cardiac arrest.

鈥淸Martinez鈥檚 death] came out of nowhere, it was center-left field because we were doing everything right,鈥 Padilla said.

Padilla has worked with the , or RCMA, in Immokalee for nearly 40 years and said she brought all the COVID-19 mitigation protocols and precautions she learned from her job back to her family.

鈥淚t was rolling and we felt like we got this,鈥 Padilla said. 鈥淪o my brother鈥檚 death was so unexpected.鈥

Community Health Fair

Martinez鈥檚 complications with the coronavirus were due to an underlying condition. After Padilla and her husband recovered from COVID-19 themselves, she had an idea to bring preventive healthcare to migrant workers in Immokalee.

In the fall, Immokalee becomes home to thousands of migrant workers during the peak harvest season that runs roughly October through May.

Padilla said providing preventive screening to those workers would help them better understand the complications that could arise if they contracted the virus.

"With the farm workers, I was really concerned that they are coming back from up north, they probably have not had any preventative care whatsoever in the past couple of months, and they are coming back to a [COVID-19] hotspot in Immokalee where they are going to be around more people, in households where multiple families live together," Padilla said. "So through the inspiration of my brother, I wanted to find a way to provide preventative screening."

On Dec. 5, the RCMA hosted a community health fair. The , and collaborated to provide flu shots, COVID-19 testing and dental, vision, blood pressure and mental health screenings.

More than 100 migrant workers and their families participated.

鈥淚 told myself that my brother鈥檚 death was not going to be in vain,鈥 Padilla said. 鈥淪o many families have suffered deaths from COVID-19, but it's due to their underlying conditions and if we can save even a handful of people, even one through educating them on their underlying conditions, then we can save their families from this [grief].鈥

Bernabe Martinez Jr. is remembered by his loved ones as an amazing cook and performer as well as a loving father, son and brother. He was 58 years old.

Copyright 2020 WGCU. To see more, visit .

/ facebook.com
/
facebook.com

Andrea Perdomo is a reporter for WGCU News. She started her career in public radio as an intern for the Miami-based NPR station, SA国际传谋. Andrea graduated from Florida International University, where she was a contributing writer for the student-run newspaper, The Panther Press, and also a member of the university's Society of Professional Journalists chapter.
More On This Topic