Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again: To that same PP—more than that, let’s say it’s NOT coronavirus. That’s one less person clogging up the works treating a presumed case.
You would not be treated any differently as a presumed case vs. an unknown case, because there is nothing to do with the information, and providers should already be wearing PPE if there is someone coughing with a fever.
OP, I get it. I'm six months out from my own open heart surgery, and I have severe asthma. I'm high risk myself. Other than allowing or not allowing me to see patients, my care would not change if I were tested and it came back positive. It's not helpful for treatment. If there were no test, the difference would be that I would be quarantined longer and unable to see patients, even if I felt better.
I am so sorry you are dealing with this.
Anonymous wrote:People saying it doesnt matter if OP is tested or not are just so dumb. . . .sure, OP should act like they have it. BUT we need to know how many people have this. If we are EVER going to get our normal lives back, we need to know wtf is going on....how it is spreading. who is getting it...what happens to them, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Go in person to Hogans office or his next press conference and ask him what he thinks you should do.
Anonymous wrote:OP again: To that same PP—more than that, let’s say it’s NOT coronavirus. That’s one less person clogging up the works treating a presumed case.
Anonymous wrote:Is there anything people can do to find out retroactively — after they’ve recovered — if they *did* have it? Will they still test positive after the fact — e.g., with antibodies — when more tests are eventually available? Or can you save a swab like with a QTip or any sample now?
Anonymous wrote:Our 80 year old neighbor was also told today at Fairfax Inova that there were NO tests available in Fairfax right now.
Anonymous wrote:Called three different doctors. Told there are now ZERO tests at GW, ZERO at Georgetown, DOH has no answers. Hoping for more tests to come in, but three of my PCP’s patients were turned away, just today, after waiting hours at GW.
I am white, wealthy, and have very good doctors. There are no tests right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is horrible. Contact the media. I got coverage for my family’s situation. Reporters are answering and engaging on these issues.
Good luck.
I will. We have been doing everything “right,” but community spread is here. Two of my family members have underlying conditions, including someone with type 1 diabetes. Yet we can’t even get a test.
And to the pp who asked what we would do differently, I don’t even have the space for you in my universe right now. You try having a family with underlying conditions that would very likely need significant respiratory help—something you would do everything in your power to get—and get back to me. I’m sorry, but go away.
There are no tests to give you. You quarantine yourself in a bedroom and if you have multiple bathrooms you use one and don't share. Someone brings you food, drink and medicine every few hours. If it gets bad, call 911 or go to the ER.