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Coronavirus

And how do you know if you’re vulnerable?
If you are old, overweight, and haven't had COVID or a booster within the past 18 months, you're probably vulnerable but new COVID isn't nearly as bad as original COVID was, at least on paper. I'm fully vaxed, not boosted, and have caught COVID twice now. For me it is not even a cold, but the weird tricks it plays with smelling things makes me very sure I didn't have false positives. YMMV.
 
Washington Post. No paywall…Long Covid will be one of the lasting, and devastating, legacies of this pandemic.

The world is moving on from the pandemic. Not so for these Covid long-haulers:


In many countries around the world, the hope is that the worst of the coronavirus pandemic is over. People have stripped off their masks. Quarantine rules are vanishing.

But three years in, there is still no standard test or treatment for post-covid conditions. Millions suffer from unexplained symptoms that many fear will far outlast the pandemic: unrelenting fatigue, memory loss, chest pain, diarrhea and boomeranging heart rates.

Data collected in June by the U.S. Census Bureau and analyzed by the National Center for Health Statistics showed that nearly one in five Americans who developed covid-19 still have long covid symptoms.

“Globally, no one understands what’s going on,” said Laurent Uzan, a French sports cardiologist who treats younger people with long covid. “We don’t give people a miracle cure. It’s a real war for them, daily.”

To understand how people around the world are coping, we invited readers to share their experiences with long covid, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention defines as a chronic condition in which symptoms appear for at least four weeks after the initial infection.

Nearly 400 people from the District to the Philippines told us how long covid has impacted their lives. We heard from a nurse who said he was fired when he could no longer work, a single mother of five who struggles to sleep, a former drill sergeant with tremors and many others. Each person experienced a unique kind of suffering, but their stories shared common themes of isolation, fear and feeling left behind by health systems, employers and friends.

Here are five stories from survivors with whom we spoke over several months. These interviews have been condensed and edited for clarity, and in some cases translated into English.
 
fair enough going by some people's posts it can be hard to tell if that was or wasn't
Dude that was a basic dad joke. It was more reflex than anything else. You are just strung too tight over it.
 
Washington Post. No paywall…Long Covid will be one of the lasting, and devastating, legacies of this pandemic.

The world is moving on from the pandemic. Not so for these Covid long-haulers:


In many countries around the world, the hope is that the worst of the coronavirus pandemic is over. People have stripped off their masks. Quarantine rules are vanishing.

But three years in, there is still no standard test or treatment for post-covid conditions. Millions suffer from unexplained symptoms that many fear will far outlast the pandemic: unrelenting fatigue, memory loss, chest pain, diarrhea and boomeranging heart rates.

Data collected in June by the U.S. Census Bureau and analyzed by the National Center for Health Statistics showed that nearly one in five Americans who developed covid-19 still have long covid symptoms.

“Globally, no one understands what’s going on,” said Laurent Uzan, a French sports cardiologist who treats younger people with long covid. “We don’t give people a miracle cure. It’s a real war for them, daily.”

To understand how people around the world are coping, we invited readers to share their experiences with long covid, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention defines as a chronic condition in which symptoms appear for at least four weeks after the initial infection.

Nearly 400 people from the District to the Philippines told us how long covid has impacted their lives. We heard from a nurse who said he was fired when he could no longer work, a single mother of five who struggles to sleep, a former drill sergeant with tremors and many others. Each person experienced a unique kind of suffering, but their stories shared common themes of isolation, fear and feeling left behind by health systems, employers and friends.

Here are five stories from survivors with whom we spoke over several months. These interviews have been condensed and edited for clarity, and in some cases translated into English.
I have had extended fatigue and memory loss and brain fog since I had covid. It isn't as severe as for some, but it is enough to be more than a little bothersome. I get frustrated nearly daily and my desk has become a sea of post-it notes to make sure I remember even mundane things so nothing slips through the cracks. It is concerning to say the least.

This has actually improved since I have adopted a ketogenic diet. Less than 30 grams of carbs per day for the past 2 weeks and I feel much sharper now and have more energy. I find this very interesting.

I plan on engaging in a long-term fast in a couple of months, like in mid-November ahead of Thanksgiving, to see if that can help me heal from this. Long-term fasting has been shown to help cells, even nerve and brain cells, regenerate and heal in ways inaccessible in any other way. Very interesting stuff.



An increase in physical and emotional well-being (each p<0.001) and an absence of hunger feeling in 93.2% of the subjects supported the feasibility of prolonged fasting. Among the 404 subjects with pre-existing health-complaints, 341 (84.4%) reported an improvement. Adverse effects were reported in less than 1% of the participants. The results from 1422 subjects showed for the first time that Buchinger periodic fasting lasting from 4 to 21 days is safe and well tolerated. It led to enhancement of emotional and physical well-being and improvements in relevant cardiovascular and general risk factors, as well as subjective health complaints.
 
I have had extended fatigue and memory loss and brain fog since I had covid. It isn't as severe as for some, but it is enough to be more than a little bothersome. I get frustrated nearly daily and my desk has become a sea of post-it notes to make sure I remember even mundane things so nothing slips through the cracks. It is concerning to say the least.

This has actually improved since I have adopted a ketogenic diet. Less than 30 grams of carbs per day for the past 2 weeks and I feel much sharper now and have more energy. I find this very interesting.

I plan on engaging in a long-term fast in a couple of months, like in mid-November ahead of Thanksgiving, to see if that can help me heal from this. Long-term fasting has been shown to help cells, even nerve and brain cells, regenerate and heal in ways inaccessible in any other way. Very interesting stuff.


Sorry to hear of your experience, and wishing you a full return to normal. Lately, I have been wondering if I had asymptomatic Covid, as I’ve noticed things that seem like brain fog and stronger fatigue. Chronic fatigue is a chronic problem I had anyway, so not sure if it’s a bit worse than I’m accustomed to. Playing it by ear, and still wearing N95 in indoor public spaces. Good luck!
 
I don't believe new Covid shots have even come out that are more aligned to Omricon variants; I believe they are still Delta-centric.

In terms of getting any shot for the upcoming season, I'm still waiting on some better guidance as the efficacy of these shots when already combined with other shots seems a bit scattered right now.
 
Newspapers or scientific?

scientific of course Maybe not so much in the US because you've already had so many people die. But government statistics in places like the UK and Australia are showing an alarming rise in excess deaths in the last 5-6 months that can't be accounted for. The Scottish government has just released some interesting data
 
scientific of course Maybe not so much in the US because you've already had so many people die. But government statistics in places like the UK and Australia are showing an alarming rise in excess deaths in the last 5-6 months that can't be accounted for. The Scottish government has just released some interesting data
I just looked these up, but some countries don't have recent entries.


Australia was in the 30s early this year, did they go up from that? By contrast, UK ran in the negatives most of the year. Are they about average for the year overall?

With record heatwaves in both countries, is this the effect of heatstroke, etc.? I don't know.
 
This this is not Trump-related, I moved the reply here.

When the government asks private companies to censor information, this becomes the issue. How do you know nothing was censored? I provided a link that the government asked to take down a parody account. I think that is censorship. Plus we don't have the all the information yet.
I don't know anything about that particular account. When I think of a parody account, I think of something that makes no pretense of being the real thing (Devin Nunes' Cow is clearly not Devin Nunes). On the other hand, AnthonyFauciOfficial is a lot less obvious. What was the content like? Why would someone specifically have to say "It is not actually one of ours:"? If it's a parody, that should be obvious, if not from the name, then from the content. Did you follow this Instagram account? What were its contents? How do you know it was a parody?

By the way, how many Facebook/Instagram accounts post material critical of Fauci to this day (I guess over 10,000)? Out of thousands of account, we have this (and I'm sure there are another dozen or so) selected for removal. If censorship is the goal, this is a truly 1%-assed way to go about it (half-assed would have been far too generous). On the other hand, if the CDC wants to maintain the difference between official documentation and material not from the CDC, this outcome is exactly what we would expect.

The DOJ is "refusing to produce communications between the most senior officials and social media companies". Why hide it, if everything is square?

Everything is not square, but that doesn't have much to do with censoring political opinions. We don't have everything because the DoJ doesn't want us to understand that almost every American is carrying around a government tracking device. They have back doors into every big social media site and every major software company. They are capable of tracking our location going back years.



This is the beginning and will continue with shutting down all stories that would hurt any administration. Why suppress the information?
What were the stories being shut down on AnthonyFauciOfficial? Let's say Bucknutz is a member of the state legislature. Should I be able to open a Twitter account as the real Bucknutz, spout out offensive rhetoric pretending to be the real Bucknutz. and take political positions that Bucknutz opposes as a part of this pretense? Or, do you think you should be allowed to present your own positions as you see fit, without another account misrepresenting you. Is it free speech to steal your identity and speak for you?

Again, why is only one account being listed here, when there where hundreds or thousand existing that could have been listed? Why single this one out?

So you can only post what the CDC says? You shouldn't post about information that pushes back against some of its claims?
Last I heard, no one was stopping antivaxxers from posting. They were just marking the posts as containing misleading information. You don't think lies should be marked as lies? Why do you want to censor Facebook and Twitter?

Why do they have to go to the government?
Do you have a better source that the CDC for information about infectious diseases/vaccines? If so, I don't have any problem with them using that source. What's your suggestion?

Okay, let's use this example. If Trump gets reelected and his administration pushes information they want out into the public and asks Facebook, Instagram, Twitter to censor anyone who posts information that goes directly against their message, you would be for that? Because they are the government? Why use any other source.
None of that happening in the documents Schmitt offered, AFAICT. However, if someone unauthorized got on Twitter claiming to be Donald Trump, I fully support Trump being able to have that account taken down. How about you?

I would rather have the government stay out of private companies.
The government has the best science resources because the government funds most of the science. Why should companies take advantage of that?

If I was a Social Media company, why wouldn't you want to have many medical professionals put out information and a person can choose to what to read or research.
Again, all that's happening is that certain posts are being marked as misleading. Faulty medical information can do serious harm.

Also, are you for censoring medical information from non-medical professionals (because you'll have a magnitude greater non-medical sources, some of them falsely claiming to be MDs)? If not, your use of "medical professionals" was either highly naive or grossly misleading.

What's the difference between traditional media and their "information"
Dan Donovan gave an ignorant take, and Abigail Marone mischaracterized what the President said. They still have active accounts and aren't even marked as misleading. The accounts' existence disproves your claims.

This comes right from the President...this was completely false as well.
"... so you do not spread the disease ..." is only an absolute statement to people who want to find fault with what he's saying.
 
Moved here for better topic relevance:

Dude. C’mon. Nothing censored ???? If you genuinely think that then I’m the next starting small forward for the Utah Jazz
Were Facebook and Twitter posts flagged as being unreliable? Absolutely. That is not censorship, that's free speech.

Really over anyone having genuine and well founded reservations based on data and the pure and utter fact that these vaccines haven’t been studied for anywhere near long enough being labelled anti vaxxer and lumped in with the lunatics fringe
I appreciate your complaint on this, and I hope you appreciate that I have not lumped you in with the lunatic fringe, and recognized your position is nuanced and cautious.

Have you have posts flagged on Facebook/Twitter?
 
I don’t get the criticism here.

Masks, social distancing, hand washing, and vaccines definitely help prevent the spread of Covid and/or limit its severity. Sort of like how seat belts, brakes, and air bags improve the safety of a motor vehicle. True, they’re not 100 percent effective. But what rational human being ever thought they were?

This thread has become weird. This is what happens when a handful of people must keep pounding away at the narrative they started out with. It’s fine to admit you were wrong, didn’t have all the info, or that there’s no perfect solution out there.
 
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