Anonymous wrote:source of this Christ Church Georgetown info?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was exposed to someone with Coronavirus (tested positive) and was told that I “didn’t meet criteria” to be tested. I have self-quarantined myself but this is ridiculous. If they don’t test, they don’t know how many people are infected.
Are you showing symptoms? If you were exposed to strep, let’s say, if you weren’t showing symptoms, would you demand a strep test?
Anonymous wrote:I was exposed to someone with Coronavirus (tested positive) and was told that I “didn’t meet criteria” to be tested. I have self-quarantined myself but this is ridiculous. If they don’t test, they don’t know how many people are infected.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wish they would tell us what hospital the positive case went to.
And where the guy lives/works
They could release a few details to help people self police themselves.
In other countries they release general address, work location, events visited even so far as planes and taxis they may have taken.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wish they would tell us what hospital the positive case went to.
And where the guy lives/works
Anonymous wrote:Wish they would tell us what hospital the positive case went to.
Anonymous wrote:Is it just DC that isn’t testing bc is they’re waiting for widespread community spread? Are Va and Md being more aggressive about it? I know there is a testing kit issue but it sounds like that’s being resolved w the 1.1 mil out this wk, 4 mil next wk etc but here it sounds like the DC Department of Health is the one saying no.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know what the criteria for testing are?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most common symptoms (based on the data out of China)
Fever, fatigue, dry cough, loss of appetite, muscle aches, shortness of breath starting around day 5 and respiratory symptoms progressing fairly rapidly with presentation to hospital with respiratory concerns typically about day 7.
Least common symptoms (less than 10% of cases):
Dizziness, nausea, vomiting, headaches, diarrhea, abdominal pain, runny nose, sore throat, coughing up sputum / blood.
Sources: Wang et al ( n = 138), Chen et al ( n = 99), and Huang et al ( n = 41). All found similar symptom profiles.
I am very suspicious my DS had this in early February as did many kids at school. Lots of absences. Like events cancelled because too many participants were out sick. And email notices that kid would be absent bounced back because the person you sent it to was out sick. My DC's symptoms: out of nowhere high fever, chills, exhausted, slept for over a day, aches, dry cough, dizzy, slight soar throat. Strep and flu tests were negative. It did not progress to respiratory, though the dry cough lingered. I rarely take this kid to the doctor for a sick visit. Glad I did, as it is in the records and I'm sure every office is reviewing their cases histories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most common symptoms (based on the data out of China)
Fever, fatigue, dry cough, loss of appetite, muscle aches, shortness of breath starting around day 5 and respiratory symptoms progressing fairly rapidly with presentation to hospital with respiratory concerns typically about day 7.
Least common symptoms (less than 10% of cases):
Dizziness, nausea, vomiting, headaches, diarrhea, abdominal pain, runny nose, sore throat, coughing up sputum / blood.
Sources: Wang et al ( n = 138), Chen et al ( n = 99), and Huang et al ( n = 41). All found similar symptom profiles.
I am very suspicious my DS had this in early February as did many kids at school. Lots of absences. Like events cancelled because too many participants were out sick. And email notices that kid would be absent bounced back because the person you sent it to was out sick. My DC's symptoms: out of nowhere high fever, chills, exhausted, slept for over a day, aches, dry cough, dizzy, slight soar throat. Strep and flu tests were negative. It did not progress to respiratory, though the dry cough lingered. I rarely take this kid to the doctor for a sick visit. Glad I did, as it is in the records and I'm sure every office is reviewing their cases histories.