Originally posted by abz2020
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I currently have the more moderate symptoms. You may recall from my past post that I returned from Germany and realised the government advice was too conservative. After 10 days the fever began, then the dreaded dry cough, tightness in the chest and as if an adult was standing on my ribcage. For the mountaineers among us it reminded me of altitude sickness hypoxia in Nepal that I have previously experienced.
At one point I thought I should be in hospital due to the shortness of breath at rest during the night. Thankfully I didn't see my family since returning and am relying on video chat. I am on the mend now I think, but this virus comes in waves.
You have mild symptoms, then you may have moderate symptoms, followed by severe symptoms. You don't know the progression of your illness or what strain you have; you won't be getting tested unless you enter hospital.
My intention is to get two tests once all NHS workers are set up to receive their regularly - I don't wish to consume tests unnecessarily. Once I can prove no detectable viral load from the two tests I wish to help out in any way I can because I already know doctors who are off sick with this due to lack of facemasks, jupiter hoods and other PPE. Rather than learn the lesson of other countries we are repeating their mistakes.
TLDR: Don't consume a test unless you really need it. Once the NHS test situation is improved within a fortnight then take at least two tests to ensure the load is undetectable. You don't want to be an asymptomatic spreader who, despite best intentions, volunteers in your community but unknowingly infects others.
For the record: my Chinese business contacts, one of whom was unwell and hospitalised, had four tests over a week being being permitted discharge from the hospital. Compare that to the UK who can't even test all health workers as of right now due to lack of supplies.
Purposeful herd strategy by proxy 'ignorance'? It seems to me that this is the dangerous game here at play.
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