Looks like there's Covid in my family

Thomas Veil

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Last night we heard that our son and daughter-in-law who live in a neighboring state have 100 degree temperatures and have been tested for Covid. Results to come in 4-10 days.

She's a schoolteacher, and in-person classes are already going on in their state, so... šŸ˜”

I texted them this afternoon (knowing that if they had Covid they'd probably be sleeping in), and it sure sounds like it. They're actually up at night with nausea, chills, sweats and head- and body aches. It's only around this time, evenings, that they feel semi-alert and awake. No breathing problems or confusion, so that's something. At least they're still in their 40s, take good care of themselves and have no children or others living with them. Still, two more weeks of this? ā˜¹
 
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4-10 day delay in getting test results does seem absurd at this point.

Wondering if shortages in good test kits is still an issue sometimes. Saw something recently about how CDC has come under pressure from the administration to switch up their covid-19 related info on their website... and among the changes, there is now some verbiage suggesting that people without symptoms don't need testing even if have been exposed to people with confirmed infection. A bunch of doctors in the community appear to disagree. Pressure for the CDC update on this point was apparently from the top of government...


Previously, the CDC said viral testing was appropriate for people with recent or suspected exposure, even if they were asymptomatic.

CDC would not comment on questions about its own policy change. A CDC spokesperson referred all questions to the Department of Health and Human Services.

Dr. Anthony Fauci said he didn't sign off on the idea of these changes.
 
4-10 day delay in getting test results does seem absurd at this point...

And thatā€™s not even promising results will be reliable. As far as Iā€™m concerned, if this lasts more than a couple of days and somebody comes back and says their tests were negative, Iā€™d say bullshit. If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck...
 
And thatā€™s not even promising results will be reliable. As far as Iā€™m concerned, if this lasts more than a couple of days and somebody comes back and says their tests were negative, Iā€™d say bullshit. If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck...
Another way they'll know is if everyone in the household gets it, it's nearly unavoidable.
 
Last night we heard that our son and daughter-in-law who live in a neighboring state have 100 degree temperatures and have been tested for Covid. Results to come in 4-10 days.

Holy smokes, if they're young and decently healthy, hopefully they can ride it out. Those kind of symptoms are pretty indicative of Covid given the time of the year, I mean, maybe a stray flu, but it's pretty early in the season.
 
So sorry to hear that. So far I don't know anybody who has gotten it. The overall theme for people who have gotten it and survive seems to be "its no joke". Hopefully they will recover soon. They'll be back to generalized bashing of whichever political ideology they disagree with in no time! It's what we all want for our children.
 
And thatā€™s not even promising results will be reliable. As far as Iā€™m concerned, if this lasts more than a couple of days and somebody comes back and says their tests were negative, Iā€™d say bullshit. If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck...

She's lucky they don't live in one of those states that have said teachers must show up even if they're sick. You know, cause kids are like almost immune.

So sorry to hear that. So far I don't know anybody who has gotten it

You're lucky. I didn't think there was anyone left who didn't at least know someone who'd gotten it.
 
Well itā€™s just the two of them so theyā€™re reliant on each other (and relatives there).

We havenā€™t seen them in person since before the pandemic, so no chance of contact spread here. My household is still Covid-free thank goodness. (And I hope I didnā€™t just jinx it.)
 
Just an update. Fortunately their temperatures returned to normal after two weeks. Other symptoms are going away too. But they feel so tired and dragged out. Given they seem to have followed the ā€œstandardā€ course of the disease those after-effects will probably last for weeks.
I'm glad they are both better! I also hope they won't be forced back to work prematurely. My 83 year old aunt survived it back in April. She got it in a nursing home, had shortness of breath for a month and was re-hospitalized for dehydration about 2 weeks after she cleared the virus. Post COVID syndrome is a ****. Yet again, she's 83, life-long smoker and already had a stroke.
 
4-10 days range suggest they are backlogged. I got my results in 6H...though I have the physician privilege, so I suspect my sample went on the top of pile
As it should be IMO, healthcare workers are our first line of defense. I didn't realize we had a physician in our midst! (y)
 
4-10 day delay in getting test results does seem absurd at this point.

Wondering if shortages in good test kits is still an issue sometimes. Saw something recently about how CDC has come under pressure from the administration to switch up their covid-19 related info on their website... and among the changes, there is now some verbiage suggesting that people without symptoms don't need testing even if have been exposed to people with confirmed infection. A bunch of doctors in the community appear to disagree. Pressure for the CDC update on this point was apparently from the top of government...




Dr. Anthony Fauci said he didn't sign off on the idea of these changes.
I and my colleagues were super pissed about this. It was clearly wrong. Yet again, Trump has no understanding of more testing means proportionally fewer hospitalizations and deaths. Qatar gets it. They test like crazy and expel migrant workers who are positive, so if they die, it's not their statistic...
 
Just an update. Fortunately their temperatures returned to normal after two weeks. Other symptoms are going away too. But they feel so tired and dragged out. Given they seem to have followed the ā€œstandardā€ course of the disease those after-effects will probably last for weeks.

Sounds exactly like my nephew. Itā€™s been more than a month now and heā€™s still dragging ass. I worry about the effects we donā€™t see immediately.

Yet again, she's 83, life-long smoker and already had a stroke.

Sounds like sheā€™s just one of those very lucky individuals!
 
As it should be IMO, healthcare workers are our first line of defense. I didn't realize we had a physician in our midst! (y)
I got prioritized over our research nurse, which is an ambiguous feeling, because I've only seen my dying patients in person since COVID. Though it's probably because I'm employed by the hospital and she's the university's employee. We have a very complicated system here.
 
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