Gotta catch'em all
I have been recovering from my 4th COVID infection. I've told people, it's not Pokemon, I've NOT gotta catch em all. Seems bad luck, my immune system, or shitty people I work around will continue to give it to me. 🫤
Yeah I get what you are saying. Asymptomatic carriers are an even bigger problem for people with low immunity.
PSA: you can still get free rapidtests, and it can definitely be useful to know whether a cold is just a cold
In the US, https://www.covid.gov/tools-and-resources/resources/tests
I wish you a well recovery.
I was feeling pretty bad a few days before Christmas. Couldn't breathe, anxiety level off the roof. I did a COVID test from the pharmacy which was negative, which in turn made me feel even more anxious about my health. A day after Christmas I was so bad I went to the hospital. They tested me there and in less than a minute it was a positive.
It was a pretty bad COVID, I got vaccinated about 2 years ago but this was the first time I actually got it. It went pretty pretty bad.
I am still suffering from long COVID symptoms, mostly issues with short breath etc. Currently lying down on the couch trying to get better. I really hope this ends soon, I need my life back.
I hope you don't have to go through the same thing. I really wish you a swift recovery.
PSA - Rapid tests from the pharmacy are highly accurate at proving a positive, they are very inaccurate at proving a negative.
Meaning if it's positive, you're positive. If it's negative, you may still be positive.
When in doubt, get a PCR test.
I've also never, never seen someone test positive on the first day of symptoms. Sometimes on the second, but almost always on the third.
The CDC bitching out to corporations by saying test on the first day so people can keep going to work sick is still insanity. I really wish they allowed people to throat swab since it's supposed to be more effective, but I'm sure they're worried about our litigious culture saying we're trying to choke Republicans to death with microchips.
I hope you have a speedy recovery with no lingering effects!
Genuine question (honestly, I'm not trying to be a troll or start a fight): doesn't it make anyone mad that things have gotten to the point where we can't live our lives without constant reinfection?
I ask 'cause I've been trying to rationalize this question, and no one in my life is really talking/acknowledging COVID anymore, so I'm not really able to bring this up without being that guy who still cares about the pandemic.
We can't live our lives without yearly influenza waves (and other viruses) either. We had one window of opportunity to stop COVID, that was when it first appeared in China. The moment it got in more places, Pandora's box was open and would never be closed again. The COVID we have now and the one back then are wildly different. Since omicron the amount of deaths and even ICU usage has gone down a cliff while the number of infections has skyrocketed. Vaccines + omicron have lead us from the epidemic/pandemic into the endemic stage, where it's just become a part of life like the flu. Not awesome, still ruining life's, but far from the death machine it once was.
No, it doesn't.
- The name is the same, but the virus is much weaker.
- We haven't found a way to eradicate it. I have more important things to worry about than something so futile.
I still haven't caught it. There are dozens of us! Dozens!
Maybe you just got a case without symptoms
Me too, however I vaccinated early and was mostly good about isolation when it was required, hence it's plausible that I have been lucky.
Out of curiosity, of those that are getting infected multiple times, have you been keeping up with your vaccinations? Fully or partially, or not at all?
Unfortunately, due to the nature of COVID, the vaccines aren't fully effective at stopping infection. The virus is just too effective, and our immune system doesn't maintain the response required.
What they do is give the immune system a massive headstart. This vastly reduces the peak viral load. This both reduces the chances of it being dangerous, as well as reducing how infectious you are.bit doesn't always stop you getting reinfected however.
Vaccines aren’t designed to stop infection. They never intended to.
The vaccine is intended to get your body familiar with the virus so that when you do get it your body knows exactly how to fight it.
Depending on the target, vaccines can allow the immune system to eliminate it before it can start multiplying significantly. For things like measles etc, this effect is strong enough to provide effective immunity. Whether vaccines can stop infections depends a lot on how you define infection. They won't magically stop the virus being able to enter your body. They can stop them from establishing themselves and stop you becoming infectious to others.
Unfortunately, the coronavirus family viruses are particularly slippery. Even our primary immunity from infection is often short lived. COVID is ridiculously good at both hiding from the immune system, and spreading to new hosts. The vaccine provides significant protection, but isn't effective enough to provide complete immunity.
Haha only 3? I think I'm up to 5 or 6 at this point. I have a very bad immune system. First time I got it(pre vaccine) I was terribly ill for almost a month. Thanks to the vaccines and boosters, in combo with paxlovid, I usually only have 2-3 days of actively bad symptoms and then another week of mild cold-like symptoms.
Isn't it really bad for your long-term health to get covid? I haven't got it yet, which at this point feels like going for a high score
It can be, but it's not guaranteed.
But covid can absolutely fuck you up for life. It's been causing autoimmune issues on top of everything else, too.
Also, you might have had it and not known. There are plenty of asymptomatic carriers out there.
Every time you get it, you roll the dice on permanent long-COVID symptoms. That risk doesn't go away.
Yeah I've had long COVID since that first time and it only gets worse each time
COVID hit me the second time at my companies christmas party. I almost forgot that it is not a regular flu and covid kindly reminded me of that. I was down and laying in bed for a whole week with fever. Took me two weeks to feel almost back to normal. Got cough 2 to 3 weeks after I recovered. Still a weird illness with even more weird symptoms like skin rashes at fingers and toes. Get well soon.
That sucks.
I hope you don't catch it again. Things will be more tougher in the future as countries being pushed by businesses will downplay this more.
Take care
Makes me so glad I'm vaccinated. Also a paranoid shut-in.
I got vaccinated too, like 3 times. The first time I got COVID was before the vaccine. Still got infected after but symptoms were more mild and recovery time was way faster. That first time without the vaccines were absolutely brutal.
I actually never got it. I also never taken a test. Ha take that you extroverts with all your ....... many ....... friends .............. someone help me
Don't worry, third is the charm!
Did you have your booster shot in the past six months?
That sucks. I genuinely can’t fathom how I haven’t caught it yet. I got the vax right when it came out at the hospital/first responder time but with how much I travelled at the peak it’s amazing I’ve still avoided it. Every booster has kicked my ass so I really don’t think I had a silent case.
Stay safe. Just one bad case of long-covid will debilitate you for months or years, effectively destroying your life.
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