Yer fuct. Hope you and yours don't get too sick and have a speedy recovery.
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Welcome to Iowa. Very small percentage of people wearing masks for months. We went to a wedding a couple of weeks ago and zero percent mask rate. Spent hours in a large room with hundreds.
Then a school orchestra concert for daughter with 1% mask rate.
The die hard mask hold outs where the wife works have all caught it the last few weeks. And others not so careful have also caught it coughing all over her office before turning positive. Maybe v1 Omicron has still kept her from being reinfected so far or maybe she is keeping up with the variants through microexposure. Wishful thinking prolly but that is where we are.
No outbreaks we know of at 97% maskless middle school for daughter which is ending Wednesday.
At this point we have just broasted our arms to the max and living our best lives in the soup. Multiple exposures and vaccines have changed how we operate. The risk of infection with Omicron V3.1415967 is still there but the likelihood it is catastrophic is nowhere near where it was
Personally still waiting to get my ass kicked by covid. Flu kicks my ass so bad.
The only precautions I am taking anymore are my innate attraction to outdoor spaces and natural aversion to indoor crowded places/ group social events unless required by the I'm a dad and husband grid.
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Here's an odd one... In-law relative, substantially lost sense of smell and taste over a year ago for unknown reasons. Just had Covid the last week or two (had it kind of bad too, considering that she's vaccinated etc: Felt somewhat disabled, had considerable difficulty getting muscles to fire for the mechanics of get out of bed). Now, recovered from Covid... smell and taste are back for the first time in over a year.
That is odd, but good news. Wife is much better on day 8 but I am certain we will test positive when we do a Rapid tomorrow. Sweating being able to fly home on the 10th.
My 8 year old just popped a positive test, a week after the wife and I. Youngest is still showing as negative somehow, even though the two of them have been joined at the hip for most of the last week.
Well, I finally got it. I don't really know when- there were lots of ailments at our 16k base camp in Pakistan- were they covid or just being at 16k and eating different food and probably got giardia, etc.. I actually left camp a couple of days early after having some dizzy spells (perhaps early covid?). I had some other weird stuff too- really bloodshot eyes that were sore but getting better. Test in Islamabad was negative so I thought maybe I was past it and flew home, but the at-home test here was positive. Between covid and 11 time zones worth of jetlag I'm a mess and my dreams are freaking weird.
Anecdotally, what I'm seeing with this recent wave is that everyone in a household gets it, but a lot will miss it because they give up testing or don't use PCRs. Testing positive 8, 9 ,10 days after the first person is not uncommon. The CDC guidelines are garbage.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/covid-v...arch-paxlovid/
Did an updated vaccine from Pfizer come out in March as promised?
A coworker came back into the office yesterday 9 days after testing positive. She is still positive. I closed my door and stayed away.
Reminder:
“Are you infectious if your test is Pos but it’s been 5 or 10 days?”
The answer is - ASSUME YES!
*This doesn’t mean you must remain in deep isolation*
Assuming infectious leads to MANY routes to NOT infect others even without isolation
Interesting article in the New York Times about how Omicron was much more deadly to older people than Delta was. I remember plenty of people suggesting here that Omicron wasn't really making people very sick. Perhaps on a percentage basis that's true, but in any case the sheer number of people infected caused a huge spike in deaths for those 65+.
Attachment 417795Quote:
During the Omicron Wave, Death Rates Soared for Older People
Last year, people 65 and older died from Covid at lower rates than in previous waves. But with Omicron and waning immunity, death rates rose again.
By Benjamin Mueller and Eleanor Lutz
May 31, 2022, 12:03 p.m. ET
Despite strong levels of vaccination among older people, Covid killed them at vastly higher rates during this winter’s Omicron wave than it did last year, preying on long delays since their last shots and the variant’s ability to skirt immune defenses.
This winter’s wave of deaths in older people belied the Omicron variant’s relative mildness. Almost as many Americans 65 and older died in four months of the Omicron surge as did in six months of the Delta wave, even though the Delta variant, for any one person, tended to cause more severe illness.
Well shit. 26 months dodging this shit and not even a close call. Just found out some folks I did dinner with yesterday tested positive this morning. They felt fine yesterday and one developed symptoms overnight, other one has no symptoms.
Hope my vaccines hold the line!
More likely the variant vaccine isn't looking any better than the current vaccine. I'm just guessing here--maybe someone here knows--but I'm thinking that the FDA was willing to give EUA after a quick trial if results were good. The companies likely looked at results early and decided they didn't justify getting an EUA.
Worth reading:
https://newrepublic.com/amp/article/...-omicron-covid
A friend just flew back from Mexico. Tested positive the day of his flight. How did you make it back, says I?
“You can buy negative test results cheap in Mexico.”
Thx for the kind comment. My wife tested negative 36 hours ago and I woke up feeling good today. Sore throat, headache, cough and runny nose all gone. I hope to test negative by the weekend. I did save the verbiage needed from a Dr if needed though, but I hope not.
Are we stupid enough to deny the amazing benefits of vaccines 1.0 and not invest in vaccines 2.0 like nasal and universal coronavirus vaccines? Based on the reading comprehension of people like Percy, the answer is yes we are:
"And vaccines still matter. Although existing vaccines no longer offer the protection they once did, given new variants, they still help prevent severe illness in many people, particularly among those who receive boosters. “None of these variants we have seen so far has been able to completely evade our immune system,” Weiskopf said. While existing variants can evade antibodies, “all of them are recognized by our T-cells—the second line of our immune system,” she said. That’s what keeps an infection from progressing to severe illness. And the genes defining our T-cell response are the most diverse in all of the genes that the human body has, Weiskopf said—which means vaccines, even when they don’t prevent infection, will continue to help keep many of us safe."