Spin off to my post - positive and future exposure
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PhyllisNJoe
My Box Is Broken
Member since 6/11 9145 total posts
Name: Phyllis
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Re: Spin off to my post - positive and future exposure
Posted by BargainMama
I feel like this is going to be like Flu A and Flu B, you can get both strains, and you can get them more than once.
I feel this way too unfortunately
Though I have already said if All goes well, as soon as I have A ton of antibodies, I’m going out to dinner damn it. Oh how I miss that. So much.
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Posted 1/7/21 6:57 PM |
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Re: Spin off to my post - positive and future exposure
Posted by PhyllisNJoe
Posted by blu6385
So let’s say someone tested positive for covid they get better, negative results goes back to their daily life.
Now say that person gets exposed again they really have to quarantine since they already had it?
Great question! I’m curious to find out the answer to this
Just because you had it once doesn’t mean you can’t get it again. Multiple people have had it more than once so yes you quarantine again. Also, there is no known timeframe with antibodies. Some people are negative for antibodies within weeks of recovering so it’s really important to still be very careful!
Message edited 1/7/2021 9:23:19 PM.
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Posted 1/7/21 9:21 PM |
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PhyllisNJoe
My Box Is Broken
Member since 6/11 9145 total posts
Name: Phyllis
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Re: Spin off to my post - positive and future exposure
Posted by TwinMommyToBoys
Posted by PhyllisNJoe
Posted by blu6385
So let’s say someone tested positive for covid they get better, negative results goes back to their daily life.
Now say that person gets exposed again they really have to quarantine since they already had it?
Great question! I’m curious to find out the answer to this
Just because you had it once doesn’t mean you can’t get it again. Multiple people have had it more than once so yes you quarantine again. Also, there is no known timeframe with antibodies. Some people are negative for antibodies within weeks of recovering so it’s really important to still be very careful!
If reinfection was that common we would hear a lot more about it. Obviously it can happen, because we hear of the cases but it’s not known yet. It hasn’t been studied close enough to have concrete facts.
I’d like to know how moderna can claim years of protection from their vaccine yet natural immunity is useless
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Posted 1/7/21 10:01 PM |
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soontobemommyof2
My boys...my everything <3
Member since 4/15 3635 total posts
Name:
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Re: Spin off to my post - positive and future exposure
Posted by PhyllisNJoe
Posted by TwinMommyToBoys
Posted by PhyllisNJoe
Posted by blu6385
So let’s say someone tested positive for covid they get better, negative results goes back to their daily life.
Now say that person gets exposed again they really have to quarantine since they already had it?
Great question! I’m curious to find out the answer to this
Just because you had it once doesn’t mean you can’t get it again. Multiple people have had it more than once so yes you quarantine again. Also, there is no known timeframe with antibodies. Some people are negative for antibodies within weeks of recovering so it’s really important to still be very careful!
If reinfection was that common we would hear a lot more about it. Obviously it can happen, because we hear of the cases but it’s not known yet. It hasn’t been studied close enough to have concrete facts.
I’d like to know how moderna can claim years of protection from their vaccine yet natural immunity is useless
This is a question I’ve been asking for the longest time! It’s crazy to me how much faith we have in a vaccine to bring immunity but not in our own defenses to create it regardless of how humans have endured the harshness of life for thousands and thousands of years without going extinct.
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Posted 1/7/21 11:42 PM |
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PitterPatter11
Baby Boy is Here!
Member since 5/11 7619 total posts
Name: Momma <3
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Re: Spin off to my post - positive and future exposure
Posted by PhyllisNJoe
Posted by TwinMommyToBoys
Posted by PhyllisNJoe
Posted by blu6385
So let’s say someone tested positive for covid they get better, negative results goes back to their daily life.
Now say that person gets exposed again they really have to quarantine since they already had it?
Great question! I’m curious to find out the answer to this
Just because you had it once doesn’t mean you can’t get it again. Multiple people have had it more than once so yes you quarantine again. Also, there is no known timeframe with antibodies. Some people are negative for antibodies within weeks of recovering so it’s really important to still be very careful!
If reinfection was that common we would hear a lot more about it. Obviously it can happen, because we hear of the cases but it’s not known yet. It hasn’t been studied close enough to have concrete facts.
I’d like to know how moderna can claim years of protection from their vaccine yet natural immunity is useless
All the infectious disease researchers I follow say they don’t know how often you’ll need to get a Covid vaccine.
Some vaccines do produce greater immune responses:
“Of interest, a few vaccines induce a better immune response than natural infection:
Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine — The high purity of the specific protein in the vaccine leads to a better immune response than natural infection. Tetanus vaccine — The toxin made by tetanus is so potent that the amount that causes disease is actually lower than the amount that induces a long-lasting immune response. This is why people with tetanus disease are still recommended to get the vaccine. Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) vaccine — Children less than 2 years old do not typically make a good response to the complex sugar coating (polysaccharide) on the surface of Hib that causes disease; however, the vaccine links this polysaccharide to a helper protein that creates a better immune response than would occur naturally. Therefore, children less than 2 years old who get Hib are still recommended to get the vaccine. Pneumococcal vaccine — This vaccine works the same way as the Hib vaccine to create a better immune response than natural infection.”
Source: Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
Message edited 1/8/2021 12:17:10 PM.
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Posted 1/8/21 12:16 PM |
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