June 18th Fantasy COVID

I wish it was only 5 days!!! I was positive for 11 and my husband 13. Son was negative so he could go to daycare… but we couldn’t bring him inside the building. So he stayed home for a week and a half while we tried to work from home. If sucked. We could have worn a mask and lied about being negative, but I would have hated if someone did that and my son got sick.
Just FYI, per the CDC guidelines, you only have to stay away from people for 5 days As long as you are fever free and symptoms are improving. And then wear a well fitting mask until day 10. You don’t have to keep testing.
 
Just FYI, per the CDC guidelines, you only have to stay away from people for 5 days As long as you are fever free and symptoms are improving. And then wear a well fitting mask until day 10. You don’t have to keep testing.
This was school policy.
 
PCR testing at port was going to catch more positive cases than the current system. I agree everyone cruising can decided their own level of risk- I will say my May case of covid (double vaccinated and boosted) was bad (104 fever bad). It was like the worst flu I have ever had. I caught it days before our cruise and cancelled our sailing. I felt lucky because had I been that sick on the ship it would have been miserable (even more so than I was).

Personally I wish, with the new vaccines for the young children, Disney would just drop testing. An antigen test given 48 hours before boarding is missing so many cases that it is not worth the headache.
 

Personally I wish, with the new vaccines for the young children, Disney would just drop testing. An antigen test given 48 hours before boarding is missing so many cases that it is not worth the headache.
The antigen tests may be missing some cases, but people are testing the week before and canceling before they cruise. If not required, they may not test. We lost five rooms from our Facebook group this week before we cruise.
 
The antigen tests may be missing some cases, but people are testing the week before and canceling before they cruise. If not required, they may not test. We lost five rooms from our Facebook group this week before we cruise.
But my point is the chances are still high you will be exposed at some point to a case on the ship. Maybe this is just a risk we should assume when cruising (like flu used to be).
 
But my point is the chances are still high you will be exposed at some point to a case on the ship. Maybe this is just a risk we should assume when cruising (like flu used to be).
Agree, but to me it is about degrees. Having people not testing at all because they don't want to know is a lot riskier than at least an antigen test to see if people are actively shedding. Plus it pushes more illness toward the end of the cruise/after the cruise, on cruises they don't have a lot of medical capacity for illness.
 
Oh ok. That’s seems a little odd but I guess day cares can do whatever. Bummer for y’all though.
It sucked but is understandable considering the little kids aren’t vaccinated (yet) and don’t wear masks. I could have lied but felt wrong about it. My husband did go to the store after 5 days when he felt better. But I would have felt weird going to work at an office while I was still symptomatic and positive, and I was feeling "sick" way past 5 days (even though per CDC guidelines my symptoms were improving). Not sure how any CMs could go back to doing their high stress/busy jobs while only 5 days out from a similar case of Covid.
 
It sucked but is understandable considering the little kids aren’t vaccinated (yet) and don’t wear masks. I could have lied but felt wrong about it. My husband did go to the store after 5 days when he felt better. But I would have felt weird going to work at an office while I was still symptomatic and positive, and I was feeling "sick" way past 5 days (even though per CDC guidelines my symptoms were improving). Not sure how any CMs could go back to doing their high stress/busy jobs while only 5 days out from a similar case of Covid.
We finally tested positive after 2 years of dedicated isolation. We think it was from a restaurant. Our instructions for isolation were 5 days after the end of symptoms, not 5 days after a positive test. According to Health Canada most shedding of the virus happens 2-3 days before symptoms start! My sister tested positive for 10 days. I tested positive on a RA test at home then negative on a PCR test . After 7 days I was positive on a PCR test (I'm sorry but I was happy about it- the end of testing for our cruise) That was about 8 days after my sister. We live together. So how does port/48hr testing catch active cases?
 
We finally tested positive after 2 years of dedicated isolation. We think it was from a restaurant. Our instructions for isolation were 5 days after the end of symptoms, not 5 days after a positive test. According to Health Canada most shedding of the virus happens 2-3 days before symptoms start! My sister tested positive for 10 days. I tested positive on a RA test at home then negative on a PCR test . After 7 days I was positive on a PCR test (I'm sorry but I was happy about it- the end of testing for our cruise) That was about 8 days after my sister. We live together. So how does port/48hr testing catch active cases?
It absolutely won't catch them all. But it does reduce them. We are down six staterooms in our Facebook group for cruise leaving next week. If I was a high risk individual, I wouldn't cruise.
Covid is here to stay and we are doing the best we can to manage risk, yet live our lives.
 
It sucked but is understandable considering the little kids aren’t vaccinated (yet) and don’t wear masks. I could have lied but felt wrong about it. My husband did go to the store after 5 days when he felt better. But I would have felt weird going to work at an office while I was still symptomatic and positive, and I was feeling "sick" way past 5 days (even though per CDC guidelines my symptoms were improving). Not sure how any CMs could go back to doing their high stress/busy jobs while only 5 days out from a similar case of Covid.
My sister had Covid and had to go back to work after 5 days. She was still symptomatic but improving. She works at a pharmacy. I guess my point is that’s what most businesses are doing, high stress or not.
 
We are just recovered, it took me two weeks to test negative and for two days it was worse than any flu I've ever had, and I'm triple vaxxed. My son (also vaxxed) brought it home from school, he had a fever for one day. I think they should resume testing at port, not just for guest safety but for crew safety. I know most of the crew members mask, but their exposure would be far less if positive cases are caught at port. If you think quarantining in a deluxe verandah is bad, imagine having to quarantine in a crew cabin. Many of these wonderful folks who make our vacations magical are from developing countries and they work on cruises because it's better pay than what they would make back home. They shouldn't be at an elevated risk of getting sick just because they're working for better lives for themselves and their families. That said, I won't take a European/Alaskan cruise while testing at port is necessary. International flights cost way too much money now to risk my kids' heartbreak at being turned away on embarkation day.
 
I guess my point is that’s what most businesses are doing, high stress or not.
That's a generalization, and may be accurate for your area or the business you know. Many do have stronger rules in place about returning to work. I think some of it depends largely on the risk of potentially infecting others, which does no good to have 1 employee back after 5 days if it means 2 others then become ill and have to be out 5 days each. As it pertains to onboard... onboard has always been super-cautious about highly contagious illness -- norovirus was the "usual" expected culprit before covid. There is no value for a CM to return to their position if potentially infectious. Last I knew DCL was extra-cautious and the CMs had at least a 10-day quarantine regardless of how ill (or mild symptoms). The ship can't function with too many CMs ill, therefore a few extra days in quarantine to avoid spread is probably preferable than "CDC minimum recommendation."
 
That's a generalization, and may be accurate for your area or the business you know. Many do have stronger rules in place about returning to work. I think some of it depends largely on the risk of potentially infecting others, which does no good to have 1 employee back after 5 days if it means 2 others then become ill and have to be out 5 days each. As it pertains to onboard... onboard has always been super-cautious about highly contagious illness -- norovirus was the "usual" expected culprit before covid. There is no value for a CM to return to their position if potentially infectious. Last I knew DCL was extra-cautious and the CMs had at least a 10-day quarantine regardless of how ill (or mild symptoms). The ship can't function with too many CMs ill, therefore a few extra days in quarantine to avoid spread is probably preferable than "CDC minimum recommendation."
I was never talking about CMs onboard a cruise ship. I would agree that is a totally different situation than other businesses. And you are right that was a generalization. I have made an assumption from my own person observations in different states and across different businesses (from hospitals to schools to retail) that it appears that most businesses have adopted the CDC guidelines (mostly because it would be easier for them). But maybe most haven’t and I have just seen the outliers. I am not opining on the appropriateness of utilizing whatever guidelines a business wants to use. Up to them.
 
Just FYI, per the CDC guidelines, you only have to stay away from people for 5 days As long as you are fever free and symptoms are improving. And then wear a well fitting mask until day 10. You don’t have to keep testi
My sister had Covid and had to go back to work after 5 days. She was still symptomatic but improving. She works at a pharmacy. I guess my point is that’s what most businesses are doing, high stress or not.
DH just caught covid from me and his business would not allow him back onsite for 10 days after his positive test even if he tested negative at 5 days (both of us tested positive still on day 10 via rapid antigen).. They are also super strict though about tracing, quarantine, etc and have onsite rapid PCR. The CDC guidelines do mention if you have access you can do a rapid after 5 days and should continue to isolate until day 10 if it is still positive. Basically the CDC guidelines are taking in account staffing and economic issues of having such a long isolation in addition to the fact that most (but not all) spread is during the presymptomatic phase through 5 days of symptoms. But people can still be contagious and spread it after 5 days—hence the wearing a mask from day 6-10.
 
There is a mental illness called hysterical contagion where people think they have a disease and even show many of the symptoms associated with it. They believe they have it and manifest like they are inflicted. I name a new variant called “cruise hysterical COVID” - where after every cruise I have been on now there is a FB group saying they all now have COVID. Not saying some don’t, and many have symptoms, but there is this sort of groupthink where you want to be part of the group so badly you actually get the disease.
I wish I could have manifested that I didn't have it when I got back!
Curious........how many people who got covid was this their second time?
I was on the June 7th Dream cruise and tested positive after we returned. This was my first time having it.
 
Agree we were on the Transatlantic in May and the only place indoors we went unmasked was dinner and all 3 of us in travel party ended up with Covid.
Mom and I were also on the Transatlantic. We actually did a B2B with the 3 night ahead of it. I did have it in January but mom had not . We tried to be as careful as possible. We wore masks as much as we could. We did not go to dinner every night. I brought many home tests with me and I was testing us every other day.
Everything went fine until 3 days before debarkation a lady sneezed right on my mom while we were on an excursion. UGH! The night of debarkation I tested her in our hotel and yup positive.
I did not test positive which is good because I was able to take care of her and come and go from our hotel to buy things she needed until we were able to fly back to the US.
 

GET UP TO A $1000 SHIPBOARD CREDIT AND AN EXCLUSIVE GIFT!

If you make your Disney Cruise Line reservation with Dreams Unlimited Travel you’ll receive these incredible shipboard credits to spend on your cruise!





New Posts





















DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest

Back
Top