ANyoen on here had the Vid
I had it a few weeks back and on a 1 -10 scale with it was a 2 at worst
I had it a few weeks back and on a 1 -10 scale with it was a 2 at worst
Thank you and stay safe!Gasdawg said:
It's a weird virus. But it can be explained to some degree based on what scientist know from MERS and SARS. Pretty much boils down to viral load. The longer one is around an infected, shedding person (usually in the first week of showing symptoms) the higher the chance of increased viral load and a more severe illness. Masks and distancing help tremendously, but they're not 100%. Especially if exposed for a longer period of time during peak shedding.
I got the dreaded call from my late 70s dad (former heavy smoker) in early December. He and mom had been meticulously wearing masks, church online, and the like. Fortunately he only had two days of mild congestion and mom never tested positive.
Two friends, both in late 40s (my age) one mildly obese and the other I'd say morbidly obese came down with it. Otherwise healthy. One spent a few weeks in ICU and barely avoided the ventilator. The other is fighting for his life on the ventilator as we speak in Jacksonville. Both are nurses.
I'll share why I'm gasdawg. I'm a gas passer for the last 24 years. Been practicing anesthesia as a nurse anesthetist in small towns since '01 (large medical centers before that), usually by myself, but business fortunately grew and I've hired more CRNAs over the years.
Never in my life have I ever seen anything like this. I've politely asked for people to take this very seriously. It may not kill you, but you can spread it so easily (if not careful) to someone it will. I'd say my icu at my primary hospital called me to intubate a patient once every two months on average. Until this spring. Now it's five times a week for our 25-bed rural hospital. After regular surgeries are done, my partner and I may spent 2-3 more hours/day just in icu whether it's intubating or putting in central lines (iv's that go to your vena cava). We usually count on getting called 3 nights/wk around midnight when it used to be once a month and that was almost always for OB. Not complaining, just giving context.
Sorry for the long post. Stay safe. Get vaccinated when you can. We're full of it at my place. Amazed I haven't got it.
Read that too. I would think most HC workers (80%+) are required to get a flu shot. (I am). Yet a few studies show a higher prevalence of COVID in HC workers.Gasdawg said:
Possibly
https://m.ufhealth.org/news/2020/uf-health-study-shows-flu-vaccination-might-confer-protection-against-severe-covid-19
Dang, I hate that's UF research
Edit: found another that doesn't mention florida...
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/a-flu-shot-might-reduce-coronavirus-infections-early-research-suggests/
BlackBaker said:
ANyoen on here had the Vid
I had it a few weeks back and on a 1 -10 scale with it was a 2 at worst
What's the point of this post? His scale was based in his experience. It was similar to mine as well. Are you trying to downplay people's right to state their own experience?Klc71 said:BlackBaker said:
ANyoen on here had the Vid
I had it a few weeks back and on a 1 -10 scale with it was a 2 at worst
What's the point of this post? "It was a 2 at worst." Are you trying to downplay the virus?