After contracting COVID-19, Chris Christie admits he 'made a mistake' not wearing a mask
Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie spoke exclusively to ABC News on Friday morning for the first time since he tested positive for COVID-19 and was released from the hospital.
"It hits you like a freight train." Christie told ABC News chief anchor George Stephanopoulos in an interview on "Good Morning America." "It all happened very, very quickly. Within 24 hours, I went from feeling absolutely fine to being in the intensive care unit."
Christie, who has asthma, spent seven days in the ICU while battling COVID-19. He said he received an antibody treatment in combination with the antiviral medication remdesivir early on in the course of his illness.
"The last two or three days, I've really kind of turned around in terms of being able to recover and getting a lot of my energy back," he said. "So I'm not yet 100%, but I'm about a fighting 80%."
Christie admitted he "was wrong" and "made a mistake" in not wearing a face mask while recently helping President Donald Trump prepare for the debate.
"I was led to believe that all the people that I was interacting with at the White House had been tested and it gave you a false sense of security, and it was a mistake," he said. "I was doing it right for seven months and avoided the virus. I let my guard down for a couple days inside the White House grounds and it cost me unfortunately in a significant way."
Christie urged the public to wear masks, saying, "there is no downside to you wearing masks and, in fact, there can be a great deal of upside."
"I think no matter what you're doing, whether you're at a rally for your preferred candidate, whether you're out at the supermarket, whether you're at a protest, no matter what you're doing, you should have a mask on and you should try to remain socially distant from folks," he said. "I did it for seven months, George, and I stayed healthy. I didn't do it for four days and I wound up in the ICU."