Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They get health care at Walter Reed with VIP doctors that the rest of us at Walter Reed cannot get. Many of us cannot even get anything beyond basic primary care, forget specialists. Walter Reed has doctors working on the virus and a vaccine and they have doctors who go between Walter Reed and NIH.
Christie was treated at a regular hospital in NJ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They get health care at Walter Reed with VIP doctors that the rest of us at Walter Reed cannot get. Many of us cannot even get anything beyond basic primary care, forget specialists. Walter Reed has doctors working on the virus and a vaccine and they have doctors who go between Walter Reed and NIH.
Christie was treated at a regular hospital in NJ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They both had access to treatment that the general public does not.
How did the doctors arrive at this treatment, if it hadn’t been tried on other sick Covid patients? They just tried something brand new, hoping it would stick?
Anonymous wrote:My cousin (32, healthy) got it in May. She had a “mild” case (high fever lasting for days, constant, violent coughing fits, prescription inhaler, off work for 3 weeks and could barely get out of bed for the 1st 2 weeks). Months later she still needs an inhaler if she does anything too laborious Like walking upstairs quickly. She had to cut back her hours at work. She needs more sleep than she used to. She has reported depression and mental fog that is starting to gradually lift only in the last month or so. We are hoping the other symptoms will eventually dissipate and that she will be able to be as active as she was before. Right now she says she feels like an old woman.
Not everyone who “recovers” had an easy time.
Anonymous wrote:I wish I could be like others and not be that worried.
I'm still so scared of Covid.
Anonymous wrote:They survived b/c the get the gold standard in treatment. And Trump was discharged to a mini triage unit setup at the WH w/ 24/7 medical staff.
For the rest of us plebes, getting Covid can be a death sentence. And for those who survive, it can be 2+ weeks of absolute misery. The worst.
Can you put your life on hold like that? Do you not have kids? A spouse? A job? Support?
Sure. You can roll the dice and hope you're the lucky few with "mild symptoms" , but that's not a risk many of us want to take.
Trump & Christie are not good indicators. In fact, they're a good example of why their complacency and carelessness got them so sick.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not just about lethality (and low death rates depend on not having an overwhelming number of people need ICU care at the same time).
A friend of mine, 30s, very fit and athletic, got Covid 12 weeks ago. She was hospitalized 6 days and very nearly vented. She now permanently has asthma and is very fatigued at all times, barely walking let alone running or working out. It’s been 12 weeks. She is nowhere near normal health. And show me the statistics that track that?!?
Anonymous wrote:Just look at the NYTimes graph of deaths. The death rate has plummeted. But, shhhh, this can’t be news until after the election.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They both had access to treatment that the general public does not.
How did the doctors arrive at this treatment, if it hadn’t been tried on other sick Covid patients? They just tried something brand new, hoping it would stick?