Nurse who died from coronavirus was a hero, risked her life for veterans, son says

Jennifer Dixon
Detroit Free Press

Divina Accad, the Veterans Affairs nurse who died of complications from COVID-19, was a hero who spent her career looking after sick veterans in Detroit, says her son.

Mark Accad said his mother died on Monday after 11 days in a hospital in Taylor. Her death was the first known fatality from the coronavirus among health-care workers in the Detroit area.

"My mom was a hero," Mark Accad told the Free Press on Friday.  "What she did was very heroic."

Divina Accad, 72, died Monday, March 30, of coronavirus. Accad, a nurse at the Veterans Administration's John D. Dingell Medical Center in Detroit, is shown with her husband, William Accad, in an undated family photo.

Divina, who went by Debbie, was 72 and had told her son last month that she was contemplating retiring from the John D. Dingell Medical Center. She fell ill March 20, and was hospitalized with pneumonia. 

More:Detroit nurse is first known health care worker to die of COVID-19 in metro Detroit

Accad was able to see her twice in the hospital, but was not allowed to see her a third time.

"The last time I saw her was at the morgue," he said.

She is survived by her husband, William Accad, two other sons, Willie Jr. and Reagan;  a daughter, Lovelet, and five grandchildren.

Mark Accad said his mother was a nurse for as long as he can remember and loved her job. She always wanted to be helpful to others. Divina lived across the street from Mark, her youngest, in Taylor.

Mark Accad said he was using her death to raise awareness of the risks health-care workers face during the coronavirus pandemic.

"Please be considerate of other people," he said, they could be health-care workers.

"She sacrificed her life for our troops. I want my mom to be known for what she did.

"She was truly 'divine.' "

Contact Jennifer Dixon: 313-223-4410 or jbdixon@freepress.com.