People or people you know who tested positive before or are positive now, how are you feeling? Both physically and mentally
Threadbans:
Dano650
snowcat wrote: » GP's have been hiding away for the last year. Its ridiculous they were prioritised for vaccination. its been impossible to see a GP face to face for the last year. They have been cleaning up referring everyone with a cough for a Covid test after a 5 minute phone consultation. They should be embarassed that they were vaccinated before real frontline workers like paramedics and pharmacy staff and indeed shop workers.
Wibbs wrote: » That sounds odd? Can a standard test determine the level of virus in the system/how infectious a person is? I thought it was just a positive/negative result.
irishguitarlad wrote: » Just tested positive for the 3rd time, I first had symptoms the 26th of december, was positive for the first time on the 2nd, did another test on the 13th and was told that I was positive but that the virus was very weak in my body and there was no need to isolate. Then today i did a lamp test with rocdoc and It came back positive, still not out of my system. They rang me and said for me to isolate, that surely can't be the case can it? I mean everyone so who went into isolation for 14 days after their 1st test and never got a re test should be all isolating for another 14 days. I rang my GP anyways to explain my situation to him. I feel great by the way, 26th and 27th i was under the weather alright.
irishguitarlad wrote: » I was positive but that the virus was very weak in my body and there was no need to isolate.
Motivator wrote: » I had the same thing in December ‘19. My wife was working in Asia for November and December and came home two weeks before Christmas. It’s possibly just coincidence but I do think otherwise now. I felt rotten Christmas week and just got worse and worse. I got so bad I was taken to hospital with suspected meningitis and was kept in for a day while they ran all the necessary tests. The rules out meningitis early enough but couldn’t figure out what was wrong with me. They eventually put it down to a bad strain of influenza. My cousin is a GP and reckons there’s a good chance I had it. My wife wasn’t sick at all and neither were any family members. It’s possible the virus was around Europe and Ireland well before Christmas and the first wave was mild and not as contagious but then what we saw in March and constantly since is the mutation and more serious and deadly strain or strains. I wasn’t fully back to myself until probably February of last year. Whatever I had, Covid or no Covid, absolutely floored me to the point where I couldn’t walk 50 yards without totally gassing out. It took a good 5/6 weeks for me to get back to myself. Thankfully I haven’t tested positive for Covid yet and I’ve had probably 5 tests since March all negative thank god.
Wibbs wrote: » Oh sure, but then you have many case where people have been very cautious, even living alone and having food delivered at a distance and still catching it, yet one or two active infections in the same house, sometimes in the same bed don't transmit it? It's very weird.
This is it wrote: » I'd you rang about Covid it's free, if you rang about something else then it's a standard charge. As for the tablets, it's your choice whether you buy them or not, not the doctors. If you don't want to spend €36 then don't get them.
Purple Papillon wrote: » I don't know if its previous immunity or if its a young adult naturally being socially distant from the family in her room. Also hygiene standards come into play. Some people are behaving responsibly and containing their germs with any slight cough or sneeze into their elbows. A year into this pandemic and other people still don't know what to do and some people are atrocious at not caring about others in their surroundings eg coughing into hands and not washing them.
derfderf wrote: » Random question for people that tested positive, or know someone that tested positive, without other people in the house being infected. Are the people that aren't infected smokers by any chance? I've read a few articles that basically say all the crap in a smoker's lungs can make it difficult for the virus to get a foothold. It's not peer reviewed or WHO advice, but it makes sense to me. It's not a hill I'd die on either, really just curious.
SteelyDanJalapeno wrote: » Chest infections are a lot more common in smokers for example
Wibbs wrote: » No, because cases quite clearly go down when social distancing measures are in place. It does seem that some people appear to be immune to the virus, either because they've already been exposed and cleared it, or because of immunity arising from a previous viral infection in their lives. The latter would explain much, even the variability in symptoms reported. The problem remains that a percentage of the population suffer much stronger symptoms which can lead to death or longer term damage that we're still not clear about. This includes younger people.
sdanseo wrote: » Does anyone know if that Coivd isolation facility in citywest for those of use poor eejits who can't go anywhere else is still operational?
Inquitus wrote: » A neighbour a few doors down passed away from Covid yesterday, massive stroke brought on by Covid it seems, he was only in his late 50's I think, tragic, leaves a wife and kids behind. RIP
Away With The Fairies wrote: » I have a pulse oximeter. Is there anything else worth having? I've been thinking of getting and wearing compression socks. They can help with blood circulation, so I'm hoping it might help with the nasty side of blood clots.