In the early evening of June 8, more than 100 mourners from North Memorial Health Hospital in Robbinsdale gathered across the street at Manor Park to light candles and share memories of a beloved colleague who fell to COVID-19.
Pinpoints of candlelight flickered in the dusk as phlebotomist and pastor Larrydean Goodridge, who had prayed for so many others over the years, became the subject of other people's prayers.
"There were so many people depending on her," her daughter Peaches Goodridge, 27, of Mesa, Ariz., said. "She didn't even have it in her to think this was going to happen."
Goodridge's death on June 1 is clouded by unknowns, including whether she and co-workers were being provided with adequate personal protective equipment at North Memorial when she contracted the virus, likely in mid-April. It's also unknown whether she caught the virus at work. An investigation by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration is ongoing.
North Memorial management told the Star Tribune that Goodridge had no known exposure to COVID-19 from a patient or co-worker. And while there's no way to know for sure whether Goodridge caught the virus at work, the timeline of how she got sick doesn't support a conclusion that she got it at work, a hospital spokeswoman said.
A planting for Goodridge was placed in the hospital's memorial garden, following the official memorial that was held for her inside the building 10 days after the vigil.
Co-workers say Goodridge believed she caught the virus at work in mid-April, when she first went out sick. Churches and businesses were closed, and there was a stay-at-home order in effect. Meanwhile, she was working close to COVID-19 patients, drawing blood while wearing only a loose-fitting surgical mask covered by a face shield, instead of a tight-fitting N95 respirator.
The president of Goodridge's union said that immediately after her death, the hospital reversed its prior policy of not providing phlebotomists and other non-nursing staff with protective N95 respirators.