Was putting off starting this and sink if not appropriate, but it seems inevitable that people will be directly affected by this.
Maybe a thread for those who have or whose close friends and families have contracted it. How they are feeling. Help available etc.
Wading through the original thread may become difficult.
I'll start. I've felt lousy since Friday. No cough or fever. Sneezing uncontrollably in the evenings. Fuzzy head so not concerned yet.
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Hay Fever (tree pollen) ?
We have to remember that "other viruses are available" but I think it will still be a useful thread. I suppose we could be encouraged by the knowledge that no Lifer has so far confirmed that he/she has been diagnosed with it.
Such a small proportion of people suffering from symptoms like this will have Covid19
Problem is that it’s gonna be loads of people with a cold sharing what it’s like to have a cold.
Ive had tonnes of people on my social saying they have Coronavirus. Why that and not any one of hundreds of other more widespread viruses?
Anyhow, my initial thought for starting this was to get insights from people that have first hand experience.
First sign was a high temperature that lasted a couple of hours - then nothing. Three days later he developed flu-like symptoms - cough, aches and so on. This lasted for 24 hours.
That was it - he is now fully recovered.
He is not in the high risk age group, nor has he any underlying medical conditions.
Said it was like normal flu apart from his chest feeling like it was in a vice.
https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/coronavirus-covid-19/
First - testing for Covid-19 is both expensive and in a lot of ways, pretty useless. Knowing whether someone has it after the fact doesn't do very much, especially when the family are known to have been in close contact with a carrier. So they should be self-isolating as a precaution regardless.
Should their symptoms develop - equally, we do not have a "cure" (or vaccine), and all treatment is supportive and symptomatic. As for "critical", this is a term used with a very serious definition in medical terms (i.e. threat to life is present and we must combat this ASAP, generally speaking). I work with medical professionals and personally know a few doctors: testing would happen comfortably before a critical diagnosis.
I think use of hyperbolic language is really really unhelpful when it comes to coronavirus. We are hearing all sorts of scare stories and being whipped up into hysteria through media. That's not to say this is nothing to worry about - it absolutely is, and we should be taking sensible precautions. But the rhetoric is reinforcing a state of panic and we collectively need to calm down so we can approach this rationally and seriously with our best foot forward.
A minority of medical professionals can sometimes be incredibly callous and insensitive.