Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ending the isolation

Program that collects devices for virus patients expands

- Mark Pratt contribute­d to this report from Waltham, Mass. RODRIQUE NGOWI AND MARK PRATT

NORTHFIELD, N.H. — It’s one of the many cruelties of the pandemic: Many people hospitaliz­ed with covid-19 are cut off from loved ones who are not allowed to visit them, for fear of the disease spreading.

Kaya Suner came up with a solution.

The 19-year-old Rhode Island man figured out a way to recycle used smartphone­s and tablets, getting them into the hands of patients suffering from the virus so they can communicat­e with friends and family.

And the idea has taken off. “Kaya, you’re 19, but you’re a superstar, you’re a hero,” said Gov. Gina Raimondo during a mid-April news conference, after her own son donated an iPad to the cause.

The project was born of Suner’s desire to help. The Providence resident considered sewing protective masks, but his parents, both emergency room physicians, inspired him to do more.

He was having an online chat with his mother — they are living apart because as a doctor she is at higher risk of contractin­g the disease — and she mentioned a critical need for ways for patients dealing with loneliness and isolation, many of them elderly, to stay in touch with loved ones.

“There’s no way for these sick patients to communicat­e with their loved ones due to the visitation ban in hospitals, and it’s really unfortunat­e that that’s what’s going on, and it’s really horrible,” he said.

So he and a friend sought donations of used smartphone­s and tablets to give to those patients.

What started as a simple Facebook plea developed into covid connectors.org, a website where people can donate “gently used” devices with video capability. The website makes donating easy, even offering step-by-step instructio­ns.

Amazon has stepped up, donating more than 500 devices.

The phones and tablets have been used for everything from celebratin­g birthdays and meeting new grandchild­ren to saying final goodbyes, Suner said.

“One family member said that they had someone in the hospital who wanted their last rites read and we were able to get an iPad to them and they had their last rites read to them, which is just like … it’s very touching,” he said.

The program has been so successful that the needs of Rhode Island’s hospitals have been met, and it is now collecting devices for Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, and Catholic Medical Center in Manchester, N.H. Suner hopes to expand into New York soon.

Suner, who plans to attend American University in the fall, is concerned that with some states starting to reopen, people will think there is no need for donations. That couldn’t be further from the truth.

“This is still a really, really large issue inside of hospitals,” he said.

“There’s no way for these sick patients to communicat­e with their loved ones due to the visitation ban in hospitals, and it’s really unfortunat­e that that’s what’s going on, and it’s really horrible.”

— Kaya Suner

“One family member said that they had someone in the hospital who wanted their last rites read and we were able to get an iPad to them and they had their last rites read to them, which is just like … it’s very touching.”

— Kaya Suner

 ?? (AP/Charles Krupa) ?? Kaya Suner holds up an iPhone and an iPad as he poses for a portrait May 4 in Northfield, N.H. Suner, whose parents both work as emergency room physicians in Rhode Island, set up a nonprofit group with a former classmate sending donated digital devices to hospitals and long-term care facilities to help patients communicat­e with loved ones after the coronaviru­s pandemic eliminated visitation­s.
(AP/Charles Krupa) Kaya Suner holds up an iPhone and an iPad as he poses for a portrait May 4 in Northfield, N.H. Suner, whose parents both work as emergency room physicians in Rhode Island, set up a nonprofit group with a former classmate sending donated digital devices to hospitals and long-term care facilities to help patients communicat­e with loved ones after the coronaviru­s pandemic eliminated visitation­s.
 ?? Courtesy Photo/Covid Connectors ?? The covidconne­ctors.org website makes donating “gently used” devices with video capability easy, even offering step-by-step instructio­ns.
Courtesy Photo/Covid Connectors The covidconne­ctors.org website makes donating “gently used” devices with video capability easy, even offering step-by-step instructio­ns.
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