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Woman who survived COVID-19, double lung transplant is using her story to help others

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MILWAUKEE, Wisc. (TMJ4) — Not everyone who meets Carmen Lerma knows what she's been through.

“I thank God every day for being alive, and for giving me one more day to do something positive,” Lerma said. “When I wake up in the morning, that’s the first thing I do. I give thanks and say please give me the strength to do as much as I can today.”

On Saturday, Lerma helped organize an event where families were able to get free Thanksgiving turkeys, groceries, Walmart gift cards, and other resources. There was also a vaccine clinic, offering the flu shot, COVID-19 vaccine and booster shot.

Born in Puerto Rico and raised in Milwaukee, Lerma’s mission is to get more of the city's Latino population vaccinated.

“I am Latina, and being Latina, I understand that sometimes we're hesitant to do certain things for certain reasons," Lerma said. “My mission is to educate as many people as I can that the COVID-19 vaccine is safe. It’s meant to protect you enough for you to not go through what I went through.”

It's been a little more than a year since Lerma survived a double lung transplant after her battle with COVID-19 did irreversible damage to her lungs. She's still practicing how to do normal things like cough and yawn.

“The only thing I notice different is my chest and my lung areas are tighter, so whenever I sneeze or breathe, I can feel them expand,” Lerma said. “Many people don’t realize after a lung transplant you have to relearn how to cough, yawn and sneeze. Those things don’t just come naturally anymore.”

Lerma has has returned to work and likes to keep busy, but she admits that can be challenging.

“People need to understand what the coronavirus does and causes,” Lerma said.

Lerma gets blood drawn every week, and takes 52 pills a day to help keep her body from rejecting her new lungs.

She says her battle with COVID, and the toll it took on her body also prompted other conditions, like hair loss, diabetes and a thyroid disorder.

At the end of October, Lerma needed emergency surgery for a stomach complication.

“Doctors put me under to check on my lungs, and they found something wrong in my stomach,” Lerma said. “I don’t remember much of it, but I have 30 staples in my stomach. Doctors told me I got very sick, very quick.”

A passion to live and to help people continues to fuel Lerma through all the health challenges.

The trauma she's been through, though, has prompted insomnia and anxiety.

“I'm not embarrassed to say that I need the help because it's really affecting me emotionally,” Lerma said. “I’m supposed to wear a machine every night to help me breathe, and I can’t get myself to put it on because it takes me right back to feeling like I’m trapped under a mask in intensive care, like I was for 45 days last year.”

The pain she still deals with and fights to overcome, giving her a new purpose.

“I just want to make a difference,” Lerma said. “Not only have I suffered the repercussions of COVID, but I have friends and family who have died from it. People need to know how they can protect themselves and their families.”

Approximately 45% of Wisconsin's Hispanic and Latino population has been fully vaccinated.

This story was originally reported by Katie Crowther on tmj4.com.