Isabelle Papadimitriou was one year away from retiring after having worked for nearly 30 years as a respiratory therapist when the coronavirus pandemic started killing people in her home state, Texas.
Her son, who lived with her, tried to get his mother to retire early, but she refused.
She said: “My co-workers need me. My hospital needs me. I’ll be OK,” her daughter, Fiana Tulip, recalled. “She said she was stronger than an ox, and we believed her, because we knew she was strong.”
Papadimitriou died at age 64 alone in a hospital bed on July 4 after having spent a week battling COVID-19.
“I don’t think she knew she was going to die, but I think she wanted to be able to say ‘bye’ just in case,” Tulip said.
Papadimitriou, who was of Mexican descent, was born in Brownsville, Texas, and had moved to Dallas for work. She was one of the many essential workers working during the pandemic.
She is among the more than 13,800 Texans who have been killed by the virus after Republican Gov. Greg Abbott started reopening the state at the urging of President Donald Trump earlier this summer, when the numbers of new cases were still rising.
Abbott put a mask mandate in place just two days before Papadimitriou died.
“Just having a mask mandate at least a month earlier, I truly believe, could have saved my mom’s life, and it could have saved a lot of Texans’ lives,” Tulip said.
Texas has reported at least 649,809 coronavirus cases since the start of the pandemic. About 40 percent of those infected are Latinos.
Latinos account for about 56 percent of all COVID-19 deaths in Texas, even though they’re only 39.6 percent of the state’s population.
“With my mom’s death, I’ve got the challenge of her being a Latina. I’ve got the challenge of her being a front-line worker. I’ve got the challenge of her being a Texan,” Tulip said. “I want the leadership in Texas and the federal government to know that my mom’s life mattered and she did not deserve to die alone in a hospital.”
‘My mom’s life mattered’
During her last week, Papadimitriou spent hours on the phone talking to as many people as possible and sending packages to her daughter.
“My husband and I were always getting Amazon packages from my mom, and it would be the most random things,” Tulip said. From white towels and floss to hand sanitizer and pink shoes for her 1-year-old daughter, Lua, she always found herself needing the seemingly random stuff her mother would send to her while sick in bed, Tulip said.
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Papadimitriou was a bank teller when she decided to become a respiratory therapist three decades ago because she wanted to help people. She went back to school to switch careers, all while Tulip and her brother were still young.
“She stuck with it for a very long time until she became very well regarded as a respiratory therapist,” Tulip said.
Papadimitriou’s seeming ability to anticipate other people’s needs didn’t go unnoticed by those who knew her.
Tulip has met an array of people who say her mother helped them through various hardships. Papadimitriou helped a woman go through a separation after meeting her at a car dealership. She printed out her personal workout regimen to share with co-workers who couldn’t afford trainers. She sent baby gifts to a new mother she had never met.









