itchin2go
When life gives you lemons, make lemonade!
- Joined
- May 8, 2007
- Messages
- 3,375
Huh. From reading this thread, I got the impression it was hit and miss ....Great to know!! So thrilled to know that Disney pulls through for all guests!
Huh. From reading this thread, I got the impression it was hit and miss ....Great to know!! So thrilled to know that Disney pulls through for all guests!
Huh. From reading this thread, I got the impression it was hit and miss ....



This is the case for most of us, which is why people are reacting negatively to you going into the park and a restaurant while ill.I also spent thousands of dollars on my vacation that trust me, wasn't easy to come by.
You didn't know that when you decided to enter the park and the restaurant. You could have potentially exposed hundreds to a virus and negatively impacted their vacations, just so you wouldn't miss your meal (which, ironically, it seems you did anyway while you sat on the public bench instead of in your room).Turned out that it was food poisoning from my TS meal the previous night--so I wasn't contagious afterall.
I would have no trouble saying any of this to you in real life. You publicly advertised that you knowingly went into the park and a food establishment while ill. Did you really expect people to applaud such a self-serving decision? Your post is a great review of the first aid staff, but it ultimately is an illustration of how you were willing to risk the welfare of everyone you came into contact with, just so you could go to CRT. It's hard to put a positive spin on that.I shouldn't be surprised at the level of judgement that there is in public forums where people can post things about others that they'd never dare say IRL, but I am surprised each and every time.
Was it around F&WF time?I'm glad that everyone else had such great experiences being sick at Disney. I too was hit by some sort of short lived, but very aggressive bug or food poisoning while at WDW. I started feeling very sick at MK and left to return to my hotel. While walking to my hotel room, I became very ill in the bushes (I tried to make it to the room...unsuccessfully). No less than 4 CMs passed me, and not a single one stopped to see if I was ok.
Working in food prep may make you sensitized to this issue, and I respect that. Encouraging people to avoid going out with such symptoms is fine. Condemning people for doing so anyway, in this situation, is unfair, unsympathetic, and unrealistic.
Please stop quoting WebMD and Mayo Online as some sort of gold standard reference of infectious disease. They're far, far from it.
1. There is no way to know for sure wether this was truly food positing unless the food from the restaurant was tested. Otherwise, it is speculation only.
2. If it was food poisoning, you may or may not have been contagious, that depends on what microorganism caused the illness.
3. Any time you wake up "extremely nauseous" as an adult and there isn't an underlying medical condition that makes that common for you it is highly likely that you are indeed carrying a contagious gastrointestinal microorganism. You should isolate yourself until you have more of an idea what is going on.
I don't get the posters who call the OP selfish and say that she should have stayed in her room. Why can't we be happy that she was properly taken care of? It created a good memory for her. Why point out that in your opinion she was wrong?
In my opinion she was not selfish towards her family, she thought of them, trying to give them a good time. It's not just thousands of dollars, you are trying to create good memories in the lives of your family, which are worth more than money. To me, she wasn't selfish, quite the contrary, she had the people dear to her in mind.
I don't get the posters who call the OP selfish and say that she should have stayed in her room. Why can't we be happy that she was properly taken care of? It created a good memory for her. Why point out that in your opinion she was wrong?
In my opinion she was not selfish towards her family, she thought of them, trying to give them a good time. It's not just thousands of dollars, you are trying to create good memories in the lives of your family, which are worth more than money. To me, she wasn't selfish, quite the contrary, she had the people dear to her in mind.
In addition to this, staying in your room is not necessarily an option or a solution. What if she was alone, her family off to the parks as they were feeling fine, and her condition got worse, and she was unable to reach the phone for help? What if she passes out in the bathroom, hit her head on the sink and lies there for hours before the family returns. No one to check on her, as there was a 'do not disturb'-sign on the door. There are so many bad scenarios possible, by keeping her in her room (also what if housekeeping misses a spot before a new family arrives). If you are a family with young children, who aren't old enough to go into the parks on their own, you have to stop the vacation, so the other adult can keep an eye on the patient. You should isolate all family members when one of them gets sick. As the other family members may not have visible symptoms, but what about the invisible symptoms?
Every place where masses of people come together, people get sick. It's easy to say afterwards what the OP should have done. But what if you (or your kid, husband, other family member) have a runny nose or a cough. Do you go to the parks or stay in your hotel room? It could be nothing, could be something serious. Or it may not be serious to you, but to people with low resistance: elderly people, infants, people recovering from certain diseases or operations etc., it could be serious. Those people who called her selfish, might have sneezed, spreading something that was caught by someone else's dear granny standing next to them while waiting for the parade, causing the granny to develop something from which she may not recover.
If you think of everything that could happen in life and try to protect yourself from all danger in the world, you can best lock up yourself in a room with padded walls.

I'd also like to add that the Nurse Practioners did not advise me to stay out of the parks or to go back to my resort. I would think that if I posed such a major health risk, as some of you suggest, that they would have at a minimum made that recommendation.
It is extremely unrealistic to think that everyone that might be sick will opt out of going to the parks. Unless Disney starts screening everyone's temp and vitals via their MB there will always be a risk. Labeling anyone from a single post and name calling because I handled a situation differently than you would've is short-sighted and just plain rude. As evidenced in this thread and throughout this board--there are ways to express an opinion without being offensive.
Since we've already covered vaccinations, measles, let's move on now to Ebola, shall we?
"Food poisoning" is just an informal term for any of a number of gastrointestinal viruses or bacteria that are commonly transmitted by food (but could be transmitted some other way). I don't know whether ERs routinely do testing to determine precisely which one, but since there are many cases that simply aren't life threatening and will self-resolve without antibiotics or antivirals, I wouldn't be surprised if they just diagnose food poisoning based on symptoms without testing a stool sample. This WebMD article makes it clear that there are many different causes, so a formal, rigorous diagnosis would be the specific agent (e.g. salmonella or E. coli), and not simply food poisoning. This Mayo Clinic article has similar information. (IANAD, but for this level of discussion, I consider the agreement of two such articles to be good enough.)
Perhaps a PP who went on about "very contagious gastrointestinal virus" had had a bad personal experience with such things, but usually this set of symptoms is only indirectly contagious, and has to be ingested; you don't get it by being in the same room, otherwise the OP's entire family would have gotten it. Thus hand washing is the prevention, and demanding self-imposed quarantine seems unnecessary for most cases. Even norovirus, which is the one that spreads rapidly on cruise ships and other crowded places, is best addressed by stringent hand washing, though staying home is recommended.
Thus a polite suggestion that staying in the room should be considered could be reasonable, but berating someone for not doing so is uncalled for. If you're going to get upset over sick people in the parks, get upset over the ones with colds and flu, which have airborne transmission, not things like stomach bugs that are largely controlled by washing your own hands.

I would follow the rules the kids' schools have - stay away from others until 24 hours of being fever and/or vomit free. It's really pretty straightforward and easy to follow. Common cold that lasts 7 - 10 days? Enjoy the parks and wash your hands a lot. Take some OTC meds to lessen your symptoms so you feel better. Vomiting? Hang back at the resort and let your family enjoy the parks (and don't worry about banging your head and passing out - give me a break, an adult with a stomach bug doesn't need to be babysat on vacation, or at home - talk about dramatic nonsense).I don't get the posters who call the OP selfish and say that she should have stayed in her room. Why can't we be happy that she was properly taken care of? It created a good memory for her. Why point out that in your opinion she was wrong?
In my opinion she was not selfish towards her family, she thought of them, trying to give them a good time. It's not just thousands of dollars, you are trying to create good memories in the lives of your family, which are worth more than money. To me, she wasn't selfish, quite the contrary, she had the people dear to her in mind.
In addition to this, staying in your room is not necessarily an option or a solution. What if she was alone, her family off to the parks as they were feeling fine, and her condition got worse, and she was unable to reach the phone for help? What if she passes out in the bathroom, hit her head on the sink and lies there for hours before the family returns. No one to check on her, as there was a 'do not disturb'-sign on the door. There are so many bad scenarios possible, by keeping her in her room (also what if housekeeping misses a spot before a new family arrives). If you are a family with young children, who aren't old enough to go into the parks on their own, you have to stop the vacation, so the other adult can keep an eye on the patient. You should isolate all family members when one of them gets sick. As the other family members may not have visible symptoms, but what about the invisible symptoms?
Every place where masses of people come together, people get sick. It's easy to say afterwards what the OP should have done. But what if you (or your kid, husband, other family member) have a runny nose or a cough. Do you go to the parks or stay in your hotel room? It could be nothing, could be something serious. Or it may not be serious to you, but to people with low resistance: elderly people, infants, people recovering from certain diseases or operations etc., it could be serious. Those people who called her selfish, might have sneezed, spreading something that was caught by someone else's dear granny standing next to them while waiting for the parade, causing the granny to develop something from which she may not recover.
If you think of everything that could happen in life and try to protect yourself from all danger in the world, you can best lock up yourself in a room with padded walls.
I don't really have a problem with people going to the parks with cold symptoms w/o fever. These last about a week and could ruin an entire trip. We are exposed to these germs all the time anyway. I just wish people would learn to cough or sneeze into their elbows like they teach kids at school. That way they aren't depositing germs to their hands and touching everything. Stomach viruses are usually pretty short lived (24-48 hours) so a couple of days in a hotel room shouldn't ruin your entire trip. I'm not sure why anyone would want to go to a park with stomach symptoms anyway. How could you have a good time?