From hero to not being trusted : How doubts about vaccines and masks impact this front-line worker cbc.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cbc.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
SASKATOON Jen Rondeau has been on the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic for the past year as a Critical Care Paramedic, and appreciates the public’s support of health care workers. However, she’s careful not to let the praise go to her head. “I’d worry I would get either complacent in my job and not keep up on things that are changing, or I might get arrogant” she explained to Eric Anderson, host of YXE Underground. “I could have a treatment plan go wrong if I let arrogance creep in.” She splits her time between with Air Ambulance and the Road Ambulance headquarters with Medavie Health Services West in Saskatoon’s Stonebridge area. Her work takes her to all corners of the province and she relishes those moments where she can work with a team to provide critical care.
Extreme D.I.Y. for Home Decor
Since they have spent so much time at home in the last year, some homeowners have taken craft and design projects to a new level.
Published Feb. 26, 2021Updated March 1, 2021
Jen Rondeau didn’t set out to turn her laundry room into a psychedelic disco lounge, but now that it looks like one, she’s very pleased with herself.
It all started in early January as demand for the homemade masks she had been selling since last spring dwindled and Ms. Rondeau, an artist and musician, found herself without a creative outlet. So she turned her attention to the gray utilitarian room in the basement of her West Orange, N.J. home.