Anonymous wrote:Avoid indoor spaces. Even with masks your risk of getting it indoors is decent if someone else who is infected has been breathing the same air. Grocery stores, malls, etc. probably don’t have adequate ventilation and filtration to really mitigate exposure risks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, hope you feel better!
Seems like there is a wide range of “mild.” My 91yo grandmother in assisted living currently has it and other than fatigue and a light cough doesn’t feel all that bad. So random considering her age and risk factors. Fingers crossed it continues that way.
Older folks can present with delirium or withdrawal. And the illness can turn on a dime for the worse. I hope she’s getting supplements and medications and stays OK.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I know you're telling the truth. I'm sorry you're sick and hope you feel better quickly.
The rest you I assume are absolute gems the rest of the time. Perhaps the prolonged stress of COVID is wearing on you in ways you can't articulate. Whatever. The following three things are true:
1. With this much COVID in the community, there's no way to do the contact tracing that would allow us to know where people are getting it. Locations of transmission have changed before and may change again, so living in such denial that you insist on applying the wisdom of two months ago to the question of where people are getting COVID now--to the point that you are calling a sick person a lying troll--is asinine.
2. There is--as of today's news--a new and more transmissible strain of COVID all over the UK. Even if you don't follow the logic re: how our meager tracing capacities have been swamped by community spread, IDK why you would assume it could not be the same way here.
https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/19/uk/christmas-covid-strain-restrictions-intl-gbr/index.html
3. There are a wide range of illnesses in which "mild" disease is defined as organ-sparing. For example, someone with "mild" lupus has lupus that is not imperiling a kidney or other organs frequently attacked by lupus. Patients with "mild" lupus can be disabled by "mild" lupus, to the point of being SSI-eligible. They are quite sick, even if their organs aren't near failure. Same with "mild" COVID.
This is true and needs to be repeated.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I know you're telling the truth. I'm sorry you're sick and hope you feel better quickly.
The rest you I assume are absolute gems the rest of the time. Perhaps the prolonged stress of COVID is wearing on you in ways you can't articulate. Whatever. The following three things are true:
1. With this much COVID in the community, there's no way to do the contact tracing that would allow us to know where people are getting it. Locations of transmission have changed before and may change again, so living in such denial that you insist on applying the wisdom of two months ago to the question of where people are getting COVID now--to the point that you are calling a sick person a lying troll--is asinine.
2. There is--as of today's news--a new and more transmissible strain of COVID all over the UK. Even if you don't follow the logic re: how our meager tracing capacities have been swamped by community spread, IDK why you would assume it could not be the same way here.
https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/19/uk/christmas-covid-strain-restrictions-intl-gbr/index.html
3. There are a wide range of illnesses in which "mild" disease is defined as organ-sparing. For example, someone with "mild" lupus has lupus that is not imperiling a kidney or other organs frequently attacked by lupus. Patients with "mild" lupus can be disabled by "mild" lupus, to the point of being SSI-eligible. They are quite sick, even if their organs aren't near failure. Same with "mild" COVID.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s sobering, that one can catch it in a store with a mask on. Especially with nobody standing in one place for long, everyone masked, etc...I was feeling okay about it recently, whereas in the beginning I was very anxious and went once every 10-12 days at 7am.
Yesterday I ran from store to store picking up my kids’ Xmas gifts (never took my mask off) because UPS has been so unreliable - I haven’t done anything like that since March. But I regret it and I’m going to be worried about it for the next 10 days.
You haven’t done anything like what? You haven’t gone into a single store since March other than this outing yesterday? Wow
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand the anger on this thread. OP is sharing her experience and you're all accusing her of lying. Why? Why do you care? She's sick and she's telling you it sucks. Why do you even care how she got it? Why are you accusing her of lying about how sick she is or isn't? It's so bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:It’s sobering, that one can catch it in a store with a mask on. Especially with nobody standing in one place for long, everyone masked, etc...I was feeling okay about it recently, whereas in the beginning I was very anxious and went once every 10-12 days at 7am.
Yesterday I ran from store to store picking up my kids’ Xmas gifts (never took my mask off) because UPS has been so unreliable - I haven’t done anything like that since March. But I regret it and I’m going to be worried about it for the next 10 days.