Okay serious question. Do you know anyone who got sick or died?

  • Tiny
  • 09-06-2020, 06:12 PM
one of my sugar baby told me that her coworkers got sick from covid in march or april.

this sugar baby, I see once in awhile, got tested positive for covid, and was negative the following week. Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
One of my sugar babies said a guy she knew well from school, 31 years old, died from Covid. (That's her age too -- I probably like them older than you do.)

Come to think of it, of the people I've described in this thread who I personally knew or heard about second hand, the men are getting hit much harder than the women. Two of them are dead and a third is probably in the hospital. A fourth and fifth had bad symptoms, worse than flu.
Grace Preston's Avatar
I know a few. One person is still having to do dialysis as her kidneys went into failure (no previous medical conditions). Another still has issues occasionally, but she had PECs' (Asthma and high blood pressure). Most recovered with few to no lasting effects. I know one child who had COVID and it escalated into other issues and she passed away a few weeks ago-- they still aren't sure of what took her out and whether or not it linked to COVID-- or if the timing was just coincidental.



I know 2 adults who died. Both over the age of 70, though-- with the PEC's that are typical of people in that age range.
I had it back in April.

I was 64 years old then, with a lifelong history of severe chronic asthma, and relatively frequent bronchial infections, including a few bouts of pneumonia here and there. I am also obese, but my heart is in very good condition.

It presented as a week or so of very bad asthma. I missed a couple of days of work. On Saturday (day 6), I coughed up a mouthful of green slime, obviously an opportunistic bronchitis, so I went in to get antibiotics started. (I've been under standing orders for well over twenty years on this.)

The doctor looked at me, agreed with me that it probably wasn't COVID-19, but, out of the now-traditional abundance of caution, went ahead and swabbed me for it. He also took a chest X-ray. The radiologist who read the chest X-ray thought she saw something, so they sent me to the ER for a chest CT. ER also swabbed me for COVID-19. They got a negative result back in a few hours, and the CT was normal, so they sent me home.

I was back to normal Monday morning. I was in at work Monday and Tuesday. At 4 PM Tuesday, I got a call from the doctor's office, saying that the swab they'd taken had come back positive for SARS-nCoV-2 (COVID-19).

I'd had NO symptoms suggestive of anything other than asthma, except possibly for a funny taste in the back of my mouth. In particular, I'd had NO symptoms that would indicate any kind of viral infection. For me, it was just a week of bad asthma. Stuff happens.

A lot just depends on what condition you're in and how you treat it. They put me on doxycycline, as I recall, and a dexamethasone injection at the office, which happens to be almost exactly the recommended regimen for COVID-19 as well as being the obvious thing to do for asthma and bronchitis.
Levianon17's Avatar
But did you know someone personally? A celebrity doesn't count otherwise millions would take credit. For me, two people at work tested positive but neither got sick. Originally Posted by the_real_Barleycorn
Interesting. My nephew took a trip from Chicago to Georgia in June. a few days after he returned home he felt sick tested positive. He was sick for about five days the first three were the worse. I believe the test aren't reliable he could have had anything his symptoms were very common almost nothing to it.
dilbert firestorm's Avatar
I had it back in April.

I was 64 years old then, with a lifelong history of severe chronic asthma, and relatively frequent bronchial infections, including a few bouts of pneumonia here and there. I am also obese, but my heart is in very good condition.

It presented as a week or so of very bad asthma. I missed a couple of days of work. On Saturday (day 6), I coughed up a mouthful of green slime, obviously an opportunistic bronchitis, so I went in to get antibiotics started. (I've been under standing orders for well over twenty years on this.)

The doctor looked at me, agreed with me that it probably wasn't COVID-19, but, out of the now-traditional abundance of caution, went ahead and swabbed me for it. He also took a chest X-ray. The radiologist who read the chest X-ray thought she saw something, so they sent me to the ER for a chest CT. ER also swabbed me for COVID-19. They got a negative result back in a few hours, and the CT was normal, so they sent me home.

I was back to normal Monday morning. I was in at work Monday and Tuesday. At 4 PM Tuesday, I got a call from the doctor's office, saying that the swab they'd taken had come back positive for SARS-nCoV-2 (COVID-19).

I'd had NO symptoms suggestive of anything other than asthma, except possibly for a funny taste in the back of my mouth. In particular, I'd had NO symptoms that would indicate any kind of viral infection. For me, it was just a week of bad asthma. Stuff happens.

A lot just depends on what condition you're in and how you treat it. They put me on doxycycline, as I recall, and a dexamethasone injection at the office, which happens to be almost exactly the recommended regimen for COVID-19 as well as being the obvious thing to do for asthma and bronchitis. Originally Posted by Sidewinder

Interesting. you had different results of your covid test from your doctor and ER a few days apart. did you tell your doctor that ER found it negative? am wondering if the dr's test gave you a false positive.
The person I mentioned who I know very well who got it is a stripper. She was traveling to Miami to get hair extensions a couple of weeks ago with two friends and gave it to both of them. She was staying with a couple in Miami and gave it to both of them too. She had bad symptoms, worse than the flu she said, but nothing's going to stand between a stripper and her hair extensions, so she went on in, had that done, and gave the Covid to the hair stylist.

She's going to see the dentist on Tuesday. She says her symptoms are gone except for partial loss of taste and smell so she doesn't think she'll give anyone Covid. I think she's kind of crazy not putting off the appointment.

All the above people had flu like symptoms. Two were men who are suffering worse than the women. One of the men, the husband of her friend in Miami, went to the hospital last night and is having problems breathing and coughing. I don't know yet whether they kept him. He's about 45 years old, a little on the heavy side she says.

I posted about this in another thread and said she'd just infected 4 people she knew about. That was from a conversation about a week ago. Now she's up to 5.

And yes, as you said, she definitely infected at least one of the people before she had symptoms, as her friend in Miami came down with it about 36 hours after she did. Originally Posted by Tiny
Exceptionally poor money management to travel to Miami to get hair extensions!
I had it back in April.

I was 64 years old then, with a lifelong history of severe chronic asthma, and relatively frequent bronchial infections, including a few bouts of pneumonia here and there. I am also obese, but my heart is in very good condition.

It presented as a week or so of very bad asthma. I missed a couple of days of work. On Saturday (day 6), I coughed up a mouthful of green slime, obviously an opportunistic bronchitis, so I went in to get antibiotics started. (I've been under standing orders for well over twenty years on this.)

The doctor looked at me, agreed with me that it probably wasn't COVID-19, but, out of the now-traditional abundance of caution, went ahead and swabbed me for it. He also took a chest X-ray. The radiologist who read the chest X-ray thought she saw something, so they sent me to the ER for a chest CT. ER also swabbed me for COVID-19. They got a negative result back in a few hours, and the CT was normal, so they sent me home.

I was back to normal Monday morning. I was in at work Monday and Tuesday. At 4 PM Tuesday, I got a call from the doctor's office, saying that the swab they'd taken had come back positive for SARS-nCoV-2 (COVID-19).

I'd had NO symptoms suggestive of anything other than asthma, except possibly for a funny taste in the back of my mouth. In particular, I'd had NO symptoms that would indicate any kind of viral infection. For me, it was just a week of bad asthma. Stuff happens.

A lot just depends on what condition you're in and how you treat it. They put me on doxycycline, as I recall, and a dexamethasone injection at the office, which happens to be almost exactly the recommended regimen for COVID-19 as well as being the obvious thing to do for asthma and bronchitis. Originally Posted by Sidewinder
I wonder if your lifelong fight against opportunistic lung infections actually strengthened your natural defense against the consequences of COVID-19, which appear to attack the lungs?
SpeedRacerXXX's Avatar
My son had it. Had the "normal" symptoms -- headaches, muscle pain, fever, cough, maybe some others. Tested positive. Has recovered and is doing well. Wife and son did not get it.

Also have step-daughter who was diagnosed with it by a doctor but due to lack of test kits was not tested. Again, had many of the symptoms of COVID-19.
Grace Preston's Avatar
Interesting. you had different results of your covid test from your doctor and ER a few days apart. did you tell your doctor that ER found it negative? am wondering if the dr's test gave you a false positive. Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm

Most likely-- it was that the ER did the rapid test and the Dr. Office did the regular test. The rapid test has had a LOT of issues with false negatives and false positives. The longer test tends to be a LOT more accurate-- with the strong majority of the "false" results.. being false negatives. My friend above who is on dialysis-- was negative on the rapid and positive on the regular.
HoeHummer's Avatar
Turd Ferguson just passed on... Originally Posted by HoeHummer
As did the OP.
rexdutchman's Avatar
No not personally , SO work at company with 500 employees around the country 1 sick for 2 days
JUST likey the FLU
  • oeb11
  • 09-08-2020, 09:00 AM
as a consumer - please know the difference in the types of tests - antigan and antibody - and what they mean
Know also - the fale negative and false positive results of the tests from different manufacturers can vary - and tests from China may be totally useless.

From the CDC - and previously posted - a non-partisan education effort.


https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019...-overview.html
Overview of Testing for SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19)



Updated Aug. 24, 2020













Note: This document is intended to provide guidance on the appropriate use of testing for SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) and does not address decisions regarding payment for or insurance coverage of such testing.


Summary of Changes
Revisions made on August 24, 2020
  • Diagnostic testing categories have been edited to focus on testing considerations and actions to be taken by individuals undergoing testing
Revisions made on July 17, 2020
  • Except for rare situations, a test-based strategy is no longer recommended to determine when an individual with a COVID-19 infection is no longer infectious (i.e., to discontinue Transmission-Based Precautions or home isolation)
Revisions made on July 2, 2020
  • Added screening to possible testing types
  • Removed examples – please refer to setting specific guidance


This document provides a summary of considerations and current Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommendations regarding COVID-19 testing strategies. The CDC recommendations for COVID-19 testing have been developed based on what is currently known about COVID-19 and are subject to change as additional information becomes available.
Viral Testing

Authorized assays for viral testing include those that detect COVID-19 nucleic acid or antigen. Viral (nucleic acid or antigen) tests check samples from the respiratory system (such as nasal or oral swabs) or saliva to determine whether COVID-19 is present. Viral tests are recommended to diagnose infection. Some tests are point-of-care tests, often used in emergency rooms, doctor’s offices, and outpatient clinics. These tests can produce results at the testing site in less than an hour. Other tests must be performed in a laboratory. If there is not a Point-of-Care (POC) device or laboratory at the collection point, samples must be sent (deliver or shipped) to a laboratory for analysis, a process that can take at least 1-2 days.
For more information on testing for COVID-19 see the Interim Guidelines for Collecting, Handling, and Testing Clinical Specimens and Biosafety FAQs for handling and processing specimens from possible cases.
Antibody Testing

The Food and Drug Administration has not authorized antibody testing to diagnose COVID-19, and the CDC does not currently recommend using antibody testing for diagnosis of any infection. In certain situations, antibody tests may be used in conjunction with viral detection tests to support clinical assessment of persons who present late in their illnesses. In addition, if a person is suspected of having a post-infectious syndrome caused by COVID-19 (e.g., Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children; MIS-C), antibody tests may be used to determine prior infection. Antibody tests for COVID-19 can play an important role in surveillance and epidemiologic studies, which can provide insights into the transmission dynamic of the virus among the general population. Unlike direct viral detection methods that can detect currently infected persons, antibody tests help determine whether the individual being tested was previously infected, even if that person never showed symptoms.
CDC Mitigation Protocols

CDC recommends the following measures to mitigate the spread of the virus and to protect vulnerable populations: social distancing, wearing a mask when social distancing is not possible, avoiding crowds, avoiding indoor crowded spaces, and washing or sanitizing hands frequently. Visit cdc.gov/coronavirus for more information.
Considerations for COVID-19 Diagnostic (Molecular or Antigen) Testing

  • If you have symptoms of COVID-19:
    • If your symptoms are mild:
      • Your health care provider (physician, nurse practitioner, pharmacist, etc.) may advise a COVID-19 test.
      • If you test positive for COVID-19 or do not get tested, you should self-isolate for at least 10 days after symptom onset and at least 24 hours after the resolution of any fever (without the use of fever-reducing medications).
      • You should strictly adhere to CDC mitigation protocols in circumstances in which you cannot self-isolate, especially if you are interacting with a vulnerable individual (for example an elderly person or an individual with an underlying health condition). You should adhere to CDC guidelines to protect vulnerable individuals with whom you live.
      • If you live with a vulnerable individual, they should be tested.
    • If your symptoms are severe or become severe, you should contact your health care provider immediately or seek emergency care.
    • If you take a test and test positive, you do not need to repeat a test. Unless your illness required hospitalization, you can return to normal activities (e.g., work or school) after the passage of 10 days from the onset of symptoms and 24 hours from when any fever has subsided on its own (without the aid of any fever-reducing medications).
  • If you have been in close contact (within 6 feet) of a person with a COVID-19 infection for at least 15 minutes but do not have symptoms:
    • You do not necessarily need a test unless you are a vulnerable individual or your health care provider or State or local public health officials recommend you take one.
      • A negative test does not mean you will not develop an infection from the close contact or contract an infection at a later time.
    • You should monitor yourself for symptoms. If you develop symptoms, you should evaluate yourself under the considerations set forth above.
    • You should strictly adhere to CDC mitigation protocols, especially if you are interacting with a vulnerable individual. You should adhere to CDC guidelines to protect vulnerable individuals with whom you live.
  • If you do not have COVID-19 symptoms and have not been in close contact with someone known to have a COVID-19 infection:
    • You do not need a test.
      • A negative test does not mean you will not contract an infection at a later time.
    • If you decide to be tested, you should self-isolate at home until your test results are known, and then adhere to your health care provider’s advice. This does not apply to routine screening or surveillance testing at work, school, or similar situations.
  • If you are in a high COVID-19 transmission area and have attended a public or private gathering of more than 10 people (without widespread mask wearing or physical distancing):
    • You do not necessarily need a test unless you are a vulnerable individual or your health care provider or State or local public health officials recommend you take one.
      • A negative test does not mean you will not develop an infection from the gathering or contract an infection at a later time.
    • You should monitor yourself for symptoms. If you develop symptoms, you should evaluate yourself under the considerations set forth above.
    • You should strictly adhere to CDC mitigation protocols, especially if you are interacting with a vulnerable individual. You should adhere to CDC guidelines to protect vulnerable individuals with whom you live.
    • If you are tested, you should self-isolate at home until your test results are known, and then adhere to your health care provider’s advice.
  • If you work in a nursing home or a long-term care facility:
    • You will need to be tested, unless you have already been tested as part of your facility’s operational plans.
    • You need to be tested if you are symptomatic. You must not go to work until your test results are known. If you test positive, unless your illness required hospitalization, you can return to work after the passage of 10 days from the onset of symptoms and 24 hours from when any fever has subsided on its own (without the aid of any fever-reducing medications).
      • You will need testing if there is an outbreak in your facility (i.e., a new COVID-19 infection in any staff or any nursing home-onset of COVID-19 in a resident), and you will need to be tested at regular intervals until the outbreak has been mitigated.
    • The higher the incidence rate in the county in which you live or work, the more frequently you will need to be tested.
    • Results of testing will be used to inform infection control interventions at your facility, including decisions regarding resident placement and work exclusions.
    • Follow any additional guidance from State and local public health officials and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).
  • If you live in or receive care in a nursing home or a long-term care facility:
    • You will need to be tested, unless you have already been tested as part of your facility’s operational plans.
    • You need to be tested if you are symptomatic. You must self-isolate until your test results are known. If you test positive, unless your illness required hospitalization, you can return to normal activities after the passage of 10 days from the onset of symptoms and 24 hours from when any fever has subsided on its own (without the aid of any fever-reducing medications).
    • You will need testing if there is an outbreak in your facility and you will need to be tested at regular intervals until the outbreak has been mitigated.
    • You will need to be tested more frequently if you leave the facility on a regular basis (e.g. for dialysis or frequent medical/other appointments).
    • Results of testing will be used to inform infection control interventions at your facility, including decisions regarding resident and patient placement.
    • Follow any additional guidance from State and local public health officials and the CMS.
  • If you are a critical infrastructure worker, health care worker, or first responder:
    • You may need to get a test, according to your employer’s guidelines.
    • Even if you have a negative test, you should, at all times, take special care to monitor yourself for symptoms and strictly adhere to CDC mitigation protocols.
  • State and local public health officials may advise specific people, or groups of people, to be tested. You should follow this advice.
  • It is important to realize that you can be infected and spread the virus but feel well and have no symptoms.
    • In areas where there are limited number of new cases, State or local public health officials may request to test a small number of asymptomatic “healthy people,” particularly from vulnerable populations.
    • If there is significant spread of the virus in your community, State or local public health officials may request to test more asymptomatic “healthy people,” particularly from vulnerable populations.
    • For example, certain settings can experience rapid spread of COVID-19. This is particularly true for settings with vulnerable populations in close quarters for extended periods of time (e.g., hospitals, nursing homes, and long-term care facilities).
      • As discussed above, those responsible for managing infection in such settings should adopt measures to facilitate the early identification of infected individuals, including initial testing of everyone in the setting, periodic (e.g., weekly) testing of everyone in the setting, and testing of new or returning entrants into the setting.
Most likely-- it was that the ER did the rapid test and the Dr. Office did the regular test. The rapid test has had a LOT of issues with false negatives and false positives. The longer test tends to be a LOT more accurate-- with the strong majority of the "false" results.. being false negatives. My friend above who is on dialysis-- was negative on the rapid and positive on the regular. Originally Posted by Grace Preston
The rapid test was not yet available at that point.

The samples were taken a few HOURS apart, not a few days. BOTH tests were reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), the Gold Standard test. The differences were swab site and processing time. The hospital has the machine in-house. The Dr's office has to send it out.

Yes, I did discuss it with the Dr's office, when I inquired about doing a confirming test, to double-check. The Dr explained that there was basically no such thing as a false positive on an RT-PCR test: it HAS to see the RNA to go positive.

It IS possible to get a positive if you have in fact killed the virus but the body's garbage disposal systems have not yet removed the debris. I do not believe that this was the situation in my case.
  • oeb11
  • 09-08-2020, 05:42 PM
Most likely-- it was that the ER did the rapid test and the Dr. Office did the regular test. The rapid test has had a LOT of issues with false negatives and false positives. The longer test tends to be a LOT more accurate-- with the strong majority of the "false" results.. being false negatives. My friend above who is on dialysis-- was negative on the rapid and positive on the regular. Originally Posted by Grace Preston

If you have a reference on that statement - I would like to read it
ThankYou.
Grace Preston's Avatar
Here's the quickest link I could pull-- not in the mood to go sourcing out links that meet the various party agendas....


https://www.healthline.com/health-ne...vid-19-testing