All prevention measures have costs. You need to decide whether the costs are worth the benefits. Personally I don’t feel comfortable imposing my cost-benefit analysis in others. YMMV. |
*on others. |
I don't see where the PP said they take "precautions". They are describing their experience with long COVID. Disabling long COVID doesn't have to affect 15% of people to be a serious issue. It is a very serious issue and I hope there is significant investment made to find effective therapies, for both long COVID and other similar post viral conditions. |
I know many high risk people including one extremely high risk person and they do not think it is reasonable to expect children to miss significant amounts of school every semester or the general public avoid all unmasked indoor activities to protect them. I don't think the PP's perspective is the norm. |
This was an amazing comment. Thank you for posting. I hope you have recovered though it sounds like it was an incredibly long road. |
I’ve got about a million dollars worth of medical charges that says ortherwise, including a 5-day hospital stay not long before the pandemic for what was essentially a cold. So yes, I do understand what it is like to live with serious, chronic health conditions. I'm sure my life would be a lot easier if it wasn't for the autoimmune disease I have. But I knew long before covid that I was responsible for my own health. And I learned at a young age that life isn't without risks. |
Nailed it. |
+2 This person really has some serious issues that need help to resolve. Their participation in this forum appears to be exacerbating their rage. |
Stating facts. Not nasty. Accurate. She needs to step away. |
There are no prevention measures right now. That is the problem and your choices impact others. If you go out sick, spread covid, flu, cold, rsv, while it is no big deal to you, it can have serious consequences to others. Its sad you don't understand that. |
This type of long covid is incredibly rare. It’s amazing that we don’t have any stats on this, because this is what people are afraid of. CDC includes having a prolonged cough or stuffy nose, or even just hair loss as long covid. |
DP It is very hard to accurately measure this. But I think ti's clear that it's obviously not going to happen to everyone who gets COVID or even 15%, but it is a large number of people who desperately need effective therapies. |
Not the poster you are responding to but things have changed: long COVID studies were including anyone who had symptoms, even very mild, after 30 days which is ridiculous. Many studies also included extremely vague symptoms like fatigue, anxiety, etc. Yes, bone crushing fatigue is one thing but many studies were not excluding things like run of the mill fatigue from being an adult living in stressful times. They also included severe cases of people being hospitalized, and yes, if you were on a ventilator, you are going to have some longer term effects for a few months and not sure that is long COVID or just the norms of being hospitalized for a serious condition and taking time to build back strength. The studies also lump original COVID and pre vaccination time with fully vaxed omicron times and I do think the numbers are going down. I've seen a lot more high quality large studies that put the number at closer to 2-3% but even in those people most symptoms are resolving in a year. Not saying it would be fun to have even mild symptoms for a year but I do think the people on twitter saying COVID is a slow mass extinction event and will lead to crippling disability in the population are not helping. On a population scale, even 0.5% of people is a lot of people for such a common illness that most will get, so I do think we should take long COVID seriously but it seems like many people are needlessly scaring people for clickbait. I hate that our country has put it on the individual to protect ourselves. Yes masking is a helpful tool but why aren't we upgrading ventilation systems and demanding better indoor air quality? This was a problem before COVID for many conditions not just respiratory viruses. |
Severe long Covid was more common following infection with the original Wuhan variant, before anyone was vaccinated. Incidence of severe long Covid is also related to viral load (people who got Wuhan variant before anyone was masking got sicker). But severe long Covid is not rare, even following Omicron infection and some people do die of it, months after surviving their acute infection. It is most likely caused by viral persistence, itself likely caused by a poor adaptive immune response (possibly attributable to past [non-Covid] coronavirus antibodies—there is a whole literature on those if anyone is interested). There is a gendered gap because women’s adaptive immune system are different from men’s (for reasons related to reproduction). In any event, the best protection against severe long Covid is not getting infected. Second best is having the best possible antibody match to currently circulating variants (which right now means the bivariant booster). Despite popular perception, past exposure to other variants (which creates antibodies that may attach but not neutralize) does not necessarily help you to avoid long Covid (it may even increase the risk). The third best protection against severe long Covid is to avoid a catastrophically large initial viral load. Masks help immensely with that, even one way masking. For those that believe that significant morbidity or disability from long Covid is rare, or becoming more rare because of less pathogenic variants, I wish you were right, but the current data does not support that view. Of course we’ll only be able to accurately tally the total morbidity rate in retrospect, several years from now. https://www.americanprogress.org/article/covid-19-likely-resulted-in-1-2-million-more-disabled-people-by-the-end-of-2021-workplaces-and-policy-will-need-to-adapt/ |
Were you this enraged about people going out with colds before the pandemic? There are certainly preventive measures YOU can take if you are high risk and the cost of those measure are worth it to you- you can wear high quality, well-fitted masks everywhere. You can stay home from all non-essential activities if you don't think that is enough. The "cost" of my young kids wearing masks all day while healthy, and avoiding all indoor activities such as birthday parties, are not worth whatever theoretical benefits comes from those measures FOR US. We wear masks when we have colds and stay home for any serious illnesses. |