My cousin has it, and has it bad. He’s in a coma on a ventilator at the moment. He was not vaxxed. It’s a terrible terrible situation.
Lucky for him he’s 29 with no other conditions other than about 40 lbs overweight. I’m betting on him living through it but having a ton of lasting issues.
Diagnosed on Sunday. It’s been pretty mild. I actually thought I had a cold, until a coworker mentioned that two of the people in our work unit had been diagnosed, leading me to get tested. I feel fine, but the two week quarantine is mandatory so I’m home working out and working thru my to-read pile.
I have taken a home test every day this week. All have been negative. My girlfriend is still sick but has had no fever for a day and she does not have any breathing issues. I’m having a PCR test tonight just to make sure I’m not Typhoid Mary.
Took a test this morning and it was positive. I did take the PCR test yesterday but didn’t get the results yet. I was hoping it was just the cold that also seems to be going around but no such luck.
My college roommate in Middle of Nowhere, England has what doctors are guessing is her second case of COVID (she was also sick toward the beginning of the pandemic, but no tests were available to confirm that it was COVID. It did have all the hallmarks of it, though, and she was told to presume she was positive.) She is a teacher who relies on public transportation, and in her area of England, she says hardly anyone is masking. She seems to be managing at home OK so far with her college-age son bringing her food, but is feeling pretty miserable and has lost her sense of taste.
Good. If you haven’t had a booster already, you’ll have to wait 90 days due to the monoclonal antibody treatment, but getting covid is like a booster anyway.
I think the antibody treatment is probably quite helpful. It helped to turn my spouse’s illness around.
This was not nearly as fun as I had hoped. The nurse hooked me up and said I would have to wait an hour afterwards in case of possible reactions. She assured me that she hadn’t even heard of anyone having a reaction. About a minute after she left I started feeling flush. About two minutes later I was reasonably sure I was going to die (only a slight exaggeration). After they unhooked me it started to get better immediately. They were all looking at me like I was crazy and it was a panic attack or something. I knew it was not. Now hours later and many tests the doctor tells me that’s the most common bad reaction to the treatment. So I’m still waiting to be released.
Still have Covid. I was released from the hospital. When I got home I realized I now lost my sense of taste. That’s fun.
The one and only other time I had an allergic reaction was to CAT scan contrast. It was a very similar reaction. That time the reaction was not as immediate but it didn’t go away immediately either. I wonder if they share some inert compound that I’m allergic to.
Huh. You and me both. Likely the two reactions are not related, but you’re the only other person I’ve heard with a similarly limited experience (though with me it was just my sinuses closing almost instantaneously).
Anyway sorry to hear you had such a scary experience. Hope everything clears up soonish for you.
Ten days ago, birthday party with somewhere between 40-50 attendees, aged 1-70.
Since then, twelve tested positive, believe others are ill but not tested (from scuttlebutt heard).
Of the twelve, four are in pretty bad shape, currently at home. The other eight vary from cold like symptoms to moderate flu like cruds.
The one thing known about this dozen? None vaccinated.
They just decided to cancel Xmas, which has caused other (presumed unvaccinated) family members to complain. Vociferously.
Almost everybody I know has been vaccinated along with the booster. One of the few people I know who didn’t just passed away. I went to great lengths to spell out why that person’s background would not fair well if they got covid.
There will be a whole lot of vaccinated people shrugging their shoulders at the funeral.
Maybe we should park vaccine RV’s at funeral homes.
That actually sounds like an excellent idea. Just park halfway down the block with a discreet sign out.
Don’t try to actively recruit funeralgoers, but I bet quite a few of them would be more receptive to the subtle message of “Vastly reduce your chances of ending up like the guy you just buried”.
I don’t know why we aren’t producing better PSA’s that explain the horror’s of dying alone on a ventilator. The best luck I’ve had in conversations with doubters is to get them to picture how horrible drowning is. I then ask them to imagine they were lying in a bed for days and never being able to catch their breath until finally they’re sedated and intubated en-route to Valhalla.