No! I keep telling him he should do that.Has he ever been antibody tested?
No! I keep telling him he should do that.Has he ever been antibody tested?
Honestly, I would not be surprised if in a few months it comes out with experts saying the current variant has a shorter time span for symptoms after exposure.
For us, it was roughly 2 days (and I think my teen who had minor symptoms may have even been just only 36 hours - we didn't realize she even had covid until I came down with it a day later). Our FL relatives who we spent time with 2 days before DD got symptoms never got it.
When my son and his g/f attended a wedding in May, they also developed symptoms within 2 days after the event. We spent an entire day with them 2 days before the wedding and we didn't get it. However, his g/f family was with them at wedding and they did get Covid.
For some reason I thought it was 3 to 4 days. My bad!This is already known to be true and the information is "out there." When a person gets their first symptoms, they were exposed 1-3 days prior. This has been the case for all of the omicron variants.
Around here they test for antibodies when you donate blood. It's a way to encourage folks to donate. They figure people want to know if they have the antibodies so they throw in that test and send you the resultsNo! I keep telling him he should do that.
Good to know. Thank you!Around here they test for antibodies when you donate blood. It's a way to encourage folks to donate. They figure people want to know if they have the antibodies so they throw in that test and send you the results
Yes - possible. My friend is an epidemiologist and she says that the 'natural immunity' window is much shorter for COVID now than it used to be. I think I recall she said 4-6 weeks? That's why they're suggesting high-risk folks get their second booster, even if they had COVID very recently.I'm seeing reports (even on here) of people getting it again a month or two after
testing positive. Is that possible? My symptoms consisted of a very congested nose and
slightly sore throat and slight cough. 48-72 hours they disappeared. To be replaced by fatigue
that lasted several days. That is gone now.
Traveling next month. Get a booster? Or will it help? Is there any natural immunity from this
variant?
Yes, this happened to me. DD went to a Friend's for Thanksgiving 2020. I ended up getting sick & testing positive about a week later. I had a mild case & thought that I was immune at that point, based on the knowledge that was out there at the time. Fast forward to February 2021 & I test positive but with far worse symptoms. Ended up w/ Covid pneumonia. My Dr told me that I was the 4th patient they had seen that had tested positive w/in 60 days during that time. That includes negative results in between because during the beginning of the pandemic, we had to have a negative test to go back to work.I'm seeing reports (even on here) of people getting it again a month or two after
testing positive. Is that possible? My symptoms consisted of a very congested nose and
slightly sore throat and slight cough. 48-72 hours they disappeared. To be replaced by fatigue
that lasted several days. That is gone now.
Traveling next month. Get a booster? Or will it help? Is there any natural immunity from this
variant?
The PCR test often shows positive several weeks after you recover. We each did one nearly a month after recovery and 2 out of 3 came back positive still. The general rule of thumb is PCR test is more accurate to show the initial positive sooner, and 2x negative rapid test indicates recovery.But I took her for a pcr before an overnight trip with 4 girls per room. Just before they were supposed to leave it came back positive
The PCR test often shows positive several weeks after you recover. We each did one nearly a month after recovery and 2 out of 3 came back positive still. The general rule of thumb is PCR test is more accurate to show the initial positive sooner, and 2x negative rapid test indicates recovery.
https://wi.mit.edu/news/new-researc...ay-test-positive-covid-19-long-after-recovery
Oh I see, I misread and thought she had it (symptoms) and then recovered. Sorry about that.She had no symptoms at all before we started testing. I believe her viral load was just really low and that’s why the home tests never caught it. Also I didn’t catch it from her either and had fairly regular PCR tests back then. Idk if she could transmit it to others or not but I wasn’t about to put her in a hotel room of 4 girls