Coronavirus COVID-19 - Global Health Pandemic #112

  • #361
We both had the Moderna one ("Spikevax JN.1 COVID-19 Vacc 0.1mg/ml inj md vials (Moderna, Inc) Booster 0.5ml") 2 weeks ago, no side effects other than a sore arm but both had a cold (negative on covid tests) about 8 days later.

Usually my partner gets more ill than me from colds, esp. being an asthma sufferer, but this time it was me who struggled to shake it off. Bit of a weird one, like the sum was greater than the parts, mild headaches, mild cough, slightly runny nose, but overall felt absolutely awful.
 
  • #362
Just adding this recent CDC change as well
COVID shot made me feel particularly bad this year for a prolonged time...worse than my other shots and worse than when I had COVID in 2022. Maybe I just had something else around the time of the shot.... I don't know, but I really do not want another one. :(
 
  • #363
I feel awful every time I get the shot. But not as bad as I do every day with long Covid. So I'll take every shot I can get at this point because I can't afford to get Covid again and have my long Covid worsen.
 
  • #364
  • #365
  • #366
  • #367
Study showing recent vax helps reduce most risks of long covid.

Since we all know that the efficacy wanes fairly quickly... I'm wondering if having recently received a vaccine means long Covid is at bay due to the short window where the vaccine as it its highest efficacy-wise. If that's the case, it sounds like as the vaccine efficacy wanes, you have a higher chance of severe disease, hospitalization, death (which we already know) and long covid. I find that pretty interesting so I think I'll go mull that over for a while. (lol)
 
  • #368
Well, I've always said there's a silver lining to just about everything, but now almost 5 years into Covid I finally came up with one for Covid. From your article:

In an unexpected twist, the scientists observed that the RNA from the SARS-CoV-2 virus – responsible for COVID-19 – triggered the development of a unique type of immune cell with anti-cancer properties. These cells, dubbed “inducible nonclassical monocytes (I-NCMs),” were found to attack cancer cells and could potentially be harnessed to treat cancers that are resistant to current therapies.

 
  • #369
I know it's how the human mind works to protect itself, but it is highly disconcerting to talk to people and realize that they have mentally blocked off the memory of all those huge temporary morgues, the heartwrenching accounts from people whose loved ones died without getting to see them one last time (or maybe only over an iPad held up by a nurse if the hospital was able to do that), and horror/terror we all felt at the sheer number of deaths (as well as the very small number of people who were able to recover from hospitalization in those early days).

And yet we still hear the same stuff over and over--getting Covid isn't that bad, getting it multiple times isn't that bad, it's fine for kids to get Covid (repeatedly).

And don't forget kids/teens don't get long Covid. Well, given that there are no long Covid clinics that I can find that treat kids under the age of 18, we don't really have a good way to gather data on that, now do we? And there's no simple blood test to diagnose it. Unless your kid ends up in the hospital with Mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS), it's not real, right?

When my son got Covid right around this time last year, he ended up with a severe daily headache (8 or 9/10 on pain scale) for FOUR MONTHS. He missed a ton of school. He had costochondritis. He had major memory issues. He developed severe depression and anxiety about going back to school--which some people just brushed off. Schools really don't believe in it/get it. We finally got things better with him going to school only about two months ago--as his health and mental health improved. It's his senior year, and you can bet we are doing everything possible to keep him safe at school for the 4 class periods he is there.
 
  • #370
I know it's how the human mind works to protect itself, but it is highly disconcerting to talk to people and realize that they have mentally blocked off the memory of all those huge temporary morgues, the heartwrenching accounts from people whose loved ones died without getting to see them one last time (or maybe only over an iPad held up by a nurse if the hospital was able to do that), and horror/terror we all felt at the sheer number of deaths (as well as the very small number of people who were able to recover from hospitalization in those early days).

And yet we still hear the same stuff over and over--getting Covid isn't that bad, getting it multiple times isn't that bad, it's fine for kids to get Covid (repeatedly).

And don't forget kids/teens don't get long Covid. Well, given that there are no long Covid clinics that I can find that treat kids under the age of 18, we don't really have a good way to gather data on that, now do we? And there's no simple blood test to diagnose it. Unless your kid ends up in the hospital with Mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS), it's not real, right?

When my son got Covid right around this time last year, he ended up with a severe daily headache (8 or 9/10 on pain scale) for FOUR MONTHS. He missed a ton of school. He had costochondritis. He had major memory issues. He developed severe depression and anxiety about going back to school--which some people just brushed off. Schools really don't believe in it/get it. We finally got things better with him going to school only about two months ago--as his health and mental health improved. It's his senior year, and you can bet we are doing everything possible to keep him safe at school for the 4 class periods he is there.
+1!!!

I too have been thinking this same thing, even though I don't have family that went through what your son did, and I'm really sorry to hear the hell he went through for so long. :( It just feels like to me that people just want to put something so unpleasant behind them and not think about it. Like an ostrich's head in the sand kind of thing. I understand. It's not fun. I find that kind of attitude concerning. Not just for me, but for everyone on the planet. Covid is still novel, and there's still so much the scientists don't know about it. It just feels like the tip of the iceberg to me what we currently know about it. What I really fear is what things will be like years down the road from so many people having had covid, once or multiple times, and what sorts of things that's done to their bodies. It's JMO that medical facilities will become crowded with people with all sorts of issues, and it will be very hard to be seen, even if you have something non-Covid related. More so than medical facilities already are and have been. I, for one, am not looking forward to it.
 
  • #371
Taking a test right now.
I started with a sore throat late Saturday.
I've been up coughing all night.
I think it's just a cold, and as I peep at a faint line, it's looking like I'm right.
Keep healthy and vigilant out there!
 
  • #372
Taking a test right now.
I started with a sore throat late Saturday.
I've been up coughing all night.
I think it's just a cold, and as I peep at a faint line, it's looking like I'm right.
Keep healthy and vigilant out there!

Be sure to take another covid test in a few days -- we know sometimes tests don't show positives for 5+ days after symptoms start. Hope whatever it is doesn't last long!
 
  • #373
Be sure to take another covid test in a few days -- we know sometimes tests don't show positives for 5+ days after symptoms start. Hope whatever it is doesn't last long!
Thank you!!!
 
  • #374
Taking a test right now.
I started with a sore throat late Saturday.
I've been up coughing all night.
I think it's just a cold, and as I peep at a faint line, it's looking like I'm right.
Keep healthy and vigilant out there!
The sore throat seems to be the constant with this strain. Not me though. I do have COVID, but not the normal results. Not yet anyway... Just "out of it's with lots of body aches.
I am just so nostalgic...over all the misery people were facing back just a few number of years ago... I DID lose a number of friend, including a bestie.....I just hope "people" will...remember and be thankful
 
  • #375
Be sure to take another covid test in a few days -- we know sometimes tests don't show positives for 5+ days after symptoms start. Hope whatever it is doesn't last long!
Auntie, so true. We all got notice after a Thanksgiving gathering that 4 people were positive for C. Many really had recognizable symptoms but still tested negative!! We are all somewhat perplexed. I, on the other hand, had virtually no symptoms, just attributing my tiredness to all the travelling/ driving I had done. But voila!! I do have it. I'm now on paxlovid, so hoping for. "mild".
 
  • #376
My mother's husband, with whom I've had a sometimes acrimonious relationship with over the years, gave me a hug at Thanksgiving. He then proceeded to tell me he'd been homebound with covid for the few weeks prior. I suspect a sabotage attempt lol.
 
  • #377
I feel awful every time I get the shot. But not as bad as I do every day with long Covid. So I'll take every shot I can get at this point because I can't afford to get Covid again and have my long Covid worsen.
How do you differentiate which symptom belongs to the shot or Covid?
 
  • #378
Auntie, so true. We all got notice after a Thanksgiving gathering that 4 people were positive for C. Many really had recognizable symptoms but still tested negative!! We are all somewhat perplexed. I, on the other hand, had virtually no symptoms, just attributing my tiredness to all the travelling/ driving I had done. But voila!! I do have it. I'm now on paxlovid, so hoping for. "mild".
I'm sorry to hear that @nhmemorymaker! I hope the paxlovid helps to keep it mild.
 
  • #379
I recieved my vaccine kind of early this year, when they announced the new vaccine was ready in late Sept.
Now I hear Covid will peak in January. :oops:
From the CDC:
We therefore expect the upcoming season to be more similar to Scenario A, with a winter peak that is higher than the preceding summer/fall peak, similar to COVID-19 trends over the last four years. This scenario model assumes variants will emerge this winter with similar severity and transmissibility to variants that drove last winter's peak, and the 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccine will have similar effectiveness as last year's vaccine.
 
  • #380
I recieved my vaccine kind of early this year, when they announced the new vaccine was ready in late Sept.
Now I hear Covid will peak in January. :oops:
From the CDC:
We therefore expect the upcoming season to be more similar to Scenario A, with a winter peak that is higher than the preceding summer/fall peak, similar to COVID-19 trends over the last four years. This scenario model assumes variants will emerge this winter with similar severity and transmissibility to variants that drove last winter's peak, and the 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccine will have similar effectiveness as last year's vaccine.
Are you only getting yours annually? I go 2X a year. September, right after the updated batch for what's currently going around... and then 6 mo later, so I'm staying protected. I'd prefer every 4 months but not sure I'm allowed to do that. If 1X a year I'd go get the updated vaccine. What you got early in the year was last years formula.
 

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
80
Guests online
2,383
Total visitors
2,463

Forum statistics

Threads
633,225
Messages
18,638,220
Members
243,452
Latest member
odettee
Back
Top