I’ve had covid. It was like having flu. Just like every other year.
I don't believe you've had flu every other year.
Frankly, I don't believe you've really had flu if you're that flippant about it.
I’ve had covid. It was like having flu. Just like every other year.
I had covid at the start of last month, I was told by NHS Test and Trace not to have an LFT for 3 months but if I developed symptoms again within that period to go straight for a PCR.How can you tell if you catch the new strain if you have tested positive for Covid in the last 3 months?
My understanding is you are unable to take a PCR test for 3 moths after testing positive so how can you possibly know?
I am concerned that I have a vulnerable mother and son, if Omricon can evade the current vaccine then I could catch it again but have no way to confirm it by a test.
That wouldn’t be highly unusual. That’s generally what happens and did in 1920 to effectively end that pandemic.It would be highly unusual and extremely lucky to find ourselves with a highly infectious variant which causes large drops in vaccine efficacy yet which also results in little or no illness whatsoever.
Unsurprising given 40% of London isn’t even double jabbed, let alone triple.Hospitalisations in London surge 26% in a week
More updates from the capital, where the latest data shows hospitalisations have risen 26% in the last seven days.
The government dashboard showed 1,460 patients with COVID were in hospital in the capital on 16 December, an increase of 297 people from 1,163 a week earlier.
And there were 199 hospital admissions with COVID in London on 14 December, up 34% from 148 a week earlier.
It was fuck all like flu when I had it.I’ve had covid. It was like having flu. Just like every other year.
So your advocating letting kids die?Aren't a lot of these non vxed people youngsters?
Beg for the vaccine?Just don’t get why these people beg for the vaccine but don’t take care of them selves in all aspects of there life
You've probably got more immunity now, when I say that I mean immunity (to the antigen that you've had injected into you) than you did the first and second time. I had Moderna too and got small temperature and headache for 36 hours. It's gone now.Thing is I only had a bit of a sore arm and a day of grogginess after my first, and absolutely nothing after my second.
Both were Pfizer but I thought Moderna was basically the same thing…
I don't believe you've had flu every other year.
Frankly, I don't believe you've really had flu if you're that flippant about it.
From memory I think you were one of those that survived whilst being very ill from this virus, different perspective, anti vaxers be warned, great you are here to tell the story.It was fuck all like flu when I had it.
I don't believe you've had flu every other year.
Frankly, I don't believe you've really had flu if you're that flippant about it.
You're right mate caught it before any vaccine roll out considered myself fairly fit but 4 weeks in hospital 3 weeks in induced coma ventilated taught me otherwise, lucky to survive thanks to the NHS with no ill affects now. The hard part was parting with 4 pints of plasma, a pint of blood for Manchester Uni and one for Edinburgh.From memory I think you were one of those that survived whilst being very ill from this virus, different perspective, anti vaxers be warned, great you are here to tell the story.
You're right mate caught it before any vaccine roll out considered myself fairly fit but 4 weeks in hospital 3 weeks in induced coma ventilated taught me otherwise, lucky to survive thanks to the NHS with no ill affects now. The hard part was parting with 4 pints of plasma, a pint of blood for Manchester Uni and one for Edinburgh.
Bloody hell. Well glad you got through it.You're right mate caught it before any vaccine roll out considered myself fairly fit but 4 weeks in hospital 3 weeks in induced coma ventilated taught me otherwise, lucky to survive thanks to the NHS with no ill affects now. The hard part was parting with 4 pints of plasma, a pint of blood for Manchester Uni and one for Edinburgh.
Took me 3 month's to get back to work, not had so much as a sniffle in the nearly 2 years since contracting it. Comparing it to flu bloody hell, lost count of the number of times I've had flu Covid was like nothing I'd ever had before. Only found out later family were told expect the worst within 24 hours at one stage I consider myself to be a very lucky lad.The million dollar man by the time they were finished with you haha. Bet your family were in bits glad you got through it.
Didn’t know that but well done on pulling throughYou're right mate caught it before any vaccine roll out considered myself fairly fit but 4 weeks in hospital 3 weeks in induced coma ventilated taught me otherwise, lucky to survive thanks to the NHS with no ill affects now. The hard part was parting with 4 pints of plasma, a pint of blood for Manchester Uni and one for Edinburgh.
I had flu in 1999, never been so ill, worse than Covid and that hit me for six. Had to take 3 weeks off work, shivering, sweating, no food, just liquids, pissing and sleep, thought I was dying.I don't believe you've had flu every other year.
Frankly, I don't believe you've really had flu if you're that flippant about it.
I think at least one of your friends posted on here that your life was in danger, you were missing for a long time, great stuff.You're right mate caught it before any vaccine roll out considered myself fairly fit but 4 weeks in hospital 3 weeks in induced coma ventilated taught me otherwise, lucky to survive thanks to the NHS with no ill affects now. The hard part was parting with 4 pints of plasma, a pint of blood for Manchester Uni and one for Edinburgh.