- Joined
- Mar 19, 2008
- Messages
- 16,436
Tested positive for third time since November.
Tested positive for third time since November.
Jaysus that’s shit luck. Did you get a booster last winter?
Yeah but I tested positive around the same time.
Anyway this time was the mildest case but also the first time I’ve had a temperature with it.
I honestly can’t remember how often I got mild viral illnesses pre-covid. Probably about a similar frequency as you have since November. I’m currently under the weather (testing negative) after having my first experience with covid in April. I actually think it would do us all good to stop testing and deal with each illness on its own merits. A few mild viral illnesses a year is basically normal. I only tested myself because the wife was nagging me so much!
Surprised by you saying that. A test takes minutes but the result can help you decide if you really should go to great aunt Maggies 90th birthday at the nursing home, or whether you’re safe to go into a medical appointment in the hospital etcI honestly can’t remember how often I got mild viral illnesses pre-covid. Probably about a similar frequency as you have since November. I’m currently under the weather (testing negative) after having my first experience with covid in April. I actually think it would do us all good to stop testing and deal with each illness on its own merits. A few mild viral illnesses a year is basically normal. I only tested myself because the wife was nagging me so much!
Surprised by you saying that. A test takes minutes but the result can help you decide if you really should go to great aunt Maggies 90th birthday at the nursing home, or whether you’re safe to go into a medical appointment in the hospital etc
So you’d continue into a medical environment without testing even if you have some symptoms?Well the official guidance is to not take a test if you feel unwell. If you have symptoms wait until 48 hours after they’ve passed before doing any of the above. Which makes perfect sense to me.
To be fair, there are some scenarios where I still test myself no matter how I feel. I have a friend who is very medically vulnerable and I’ll test myself if I’m going to hang out at his place for an evening. Other than that, though, I’m done with testing. Life moves on. It’s time to put most of this stuff behind us.
So you’d continue into a medical environment without testing even if you have some symptoms?
Fair enough but I’ll ask you this; how do they tell how bad a strain is if no one is testing anymore? Serious question. It seems very TrumpesqueCome on, geebs. Read what I wrote. I’ll be following the official guidance. Isolating myself until 48 hours after symptoms have passed. In fact, I’m doing that right now! (have head cold since the weekend) Once those 48 hours are up, it’s back to living as normal.
Fair enough but I’ll ask you this; how do they tell how bad a strain is if no one is testing anymore? Serious question. It seems very Trumpesque
The ONS survey continues in the UK. They do sequencing on their positive results so we'll see any strain that's got a significant community prevalence. Hospital surveillance continues as well, mostly on inpatients which is where we get severity data - only a few countries ever did much work on that anyway, and the ones who did, still do but at a lower scale.Fair enough but I’ll ask you this; how do they tell how bad a strain is if no one is testing anymore? Serious question. It seems very Trumpesque
How bad is this strain? The wife's 90plus year old granny has just got it.
Cheers mateIt seems to be a bit worse than omicron but not as bad as the first strain perhaps more contagious
I hope she will be ok
There's a big element of luck involved for everyone, not just the over 90s, though they're the group at highest risk. The odds are firmly on her side though, even at her age, and if she's vaccinated she's done what she can to be prepared. Compared to previous mutations, this one is not as bad as Alpha or Delta but it is infecting a lot of people.How bad is this strain? The wife's 90plus year old granny has just got it.
Well the official guidance is to not take a test if you feel unwell. If you have symptoms wait until 48 hours after they’ve passed before doing any of the above. Which makes perfect sense to me.
To be fair, there are some scenarios where I still test myself no matter how I feel. I have a friend who is very medically vulnerable and I’ll test myself if I’m going to hang out at his place for an evening. Other than that, though, I’m done with testing. Life moves on. It’s time to put most of this stuff behind us.
After taking about six tests in the past weeks due to constant exposures I can safely say that RAT tests are great if you're already actually sick, otherwise they're pointless. The symptoms come before you trigger a test, at least that's been the experience for me, my family and my friends. They seem very reliable at determining whether what you have is actually covid or not, though.I have never taken a rapid test as a precaution due to the high false negative when viral load is low. In retrospect I did have one mild cold for a day or so but there were no chest symptoms at all and barely a sniffle. I isolated as I would for a cold or flu as I've always hated people going in to work sick to prove something or other. I now wonder if I had an nearly asymptomatic covid infection. Now had my 4th shot so hoping even if I do get it that it should be very mild.
Second half of that sentence completely changed what I thought you were saying.How bad is this strain? The wife's 90plus year old granny has just got it.
Eh. Where in the world are you? What report are you looking at?Feck me cases went from 1000 new cases a day on the 8th, to 190,000 new cases a day on the 13th?
How does that happen, never seen such a drastic rise before. Is it due to a lack of people getting tested compared to the last few years, but then if it is how did 190,000 new cases suddenly get identified? Are symptoms getting worse again and people are now testing again over the past week?
Eh. Where in the world are you? What report are you looking at?
The UK, like most of the world, has pretty much stopped routine testing. It's only really hospital admissions and healthcare staff who are getting tested now. We know from the ONS survey that around 4/5% of the population would test positive for covid this week, but that measure hasn't been below 1% for months.
There is a surge in hospital admissions at the moment, caused by BA5, but the growth is tailing off now and (if the trend continues) could start falling next week.
Where did you see those numbers? Basically we are running at about 190k cases/day if you count all the cases (symptomatic and asymptomatic) if you use the ONS random survey and scale up the numbers to get a whole country figure but we haven't been down at 1000 since early 2020Hopefully you’re right about it falling off. I heard cases were on the rises & noticed more disruption to daily services in the past week or so, didn’t connect it was people off due to covid thou, just had a bit of a heart attack when I checked the stats and saw 190,000 plus infections yesterday Vs 1000 last Friday.
The Google chart page. They show daily infections, 7 day average, deaths, and can also show hospitalisations. The data comes from “Our World in Data” who i think takes it from various gov & health sites.Where did you see those numbers?
That's a database anomaly. Every now and again the government website issues a data correction - if you use the wrong stat (the one based on "report day" rather than the ones based on "test specimen day") that shows up as wild blips on the graphs. They recently went from daily to weekly reporting, and some sites picked up a quirk of the changeover. The current daily dashboard cases stat (hospital tests and healthcare/carehome staff basically) is around 25k.The Google chart page. They show daily infections, 7 day average, deaths, and can also show hospitalisations. The data comes from “Our World in Data” who i think takes it from various gov & health sites.
Yeah. After your message about hospitalisations I checked the hospitalisations stats and for the 8th it showed hospitalisations were way above. Also around that time was a few days with no data available, so what you said about the recent change makes sense.That's a database anomaly. Every now and again the government website issues a data correction - if you use the wrong stat (the one based on "report day" rather than the ones based on "test specimen day") that shows up as wild blips on the graphs. They recently went from daily to weekly reporting, and some sites picked up a quirk of the changeover. The current daily dashboard cases stat (hospital tests and healthcare/carehome staff basically) is around 25k.
How are you getting on now? Is it arrythmia or something else that's causing trouble now?
In a way, it's hard for us Europeans to visualise the problem created by the lack of a public health service in the US on things like this. Compensation schemes here can be sluggish to pay out but at least you aren't clocking up medical bills as well while you're waiting.
I know there's a government compensation in the US as well, but I've no idea how quick, generous or inclusive it is.
In terms of the raw averages, we know that vaccines are safer than Covid - in all approved age groups. But certainly by the time you get to people talking about fourth booster doses in healthy under 30s, the numbers aren't nearly so clear cut.
At any rate, there's still a lot of monitoring and research underway, so hopefully we'll know more before any new booster campaign starts in the autumn.
Good luck getting your own health issues sorted.
Yes.Entire family has covid except me. They’ve all recovered now but here I am, covid free.
Is this normal? Can one person avoid bullets in a household like this?
I must have missed the memo as to when the comment section on YouTube became an antivaxx cesspool. I was just watching a video on the latest Covid strain and Jesus H., these idiots talk about being a fecking 'pureblood' like it's an achievement instead of a brain defect.
Entire family has covid except me. They’ve all recovered now but here I am, covid free.
Is this normal? Can one person avoid bullets in a household like this?
This happened with me on the first wave.Entire family has covid except me. They’ve all recovered now but here I am, covid free.
Is this normal? Can one person avoid bullets in a household like this?
Entire family has covid except me. They’ve all recovered now but here I am, covid free.
Is this normal? Can one person avoid bullets in a household like this?
Will do. Kids all have it, sleeping beside girlfriend while routinely carrying toddler around who has it. I still can’t get my head around it.There’s a study underway in Ireland looking to identify people who might have innate resistance.You should register.