Revelation
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- Aug 15, 2016
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They eased him back with a nice 8:22 TOI in the first..
Kuznetsov supposedly had it bad too and then came back as if nothing happened, seems to be a recurring motif for athletes.
They eased him back with a nice 8:22 TOI in the first..
If you had it in November you're immune to at least next August, probably longer. No need to take any vaccine until then, or wear a mask.
I would almost guarantee even as of yesterday’s game he’s still feeling it, especially since his were severe symptoms. My boss got it who is a total excercise health freak about 2 months ago and missed a month of work with crazy lingering symptoms and even brain inflammation for awhile
Its not literal statement, hence the almost, as an occupational therapist I've seen alot of people with severe symptoms have them linger for a few month sometimes longerHow in the world could you possibly guarantee this?
Just want to point out that this is not true and research does not echo this posters sentiment. Continue to take appropriate precautions.
Its not literal statement, hence the almost, as an occupational therapist I've seen alot of people with severe symptoms have them linger for a few month sometimes longer
Buffalo didn’t withhold anything other than what the league mandated (as in the team can’t announce Player X contracted Covid, but Player X is free to announce it). Everyone knew who may or may not have contracted it. That’s why some players were back earlier than others.
Doesn't matter, RR is in the article blaming NHL for contracting him with COVID. That game should have not happened.
edit: And he is not blaming buffalo in any way. The blames the NHL.
Why would they suit him up with lingering symptoms? Or why would he come back with them?
I think one of Sweden's biggest emergency hospitals Danderyd Hospital, the University of Uppsala, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, SciLifeLab and The Swedish Public Health Agency knows this stuff better than you.Just want to point out that this is not true and research does not echo this posters sentiment. Continue to take appropriate precautions.
I think one of Sweden's biggest emergency hospitals Danderyd Hospital, the University of Uppsala, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, SciLifeLab and The Swedish Public Health Agency knows this stuff better than you.
Press - Danderyds sjukhus
I think one of Sweden's biggest emergency hospitals Danderyd Hospital, the University of Uppsala, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, SciLifeLab and The Swedish Public Health Agency knows this stuff better than you.
Press - Danderyds sjukhus
Because he's a pro, and if he's not still carrying it and feels like he can play then he will as most guys want to be out there. I mean players play through injuries or sickness all the time, you can be fatigued, have brain fog and still be able to get it together for 20 minutes or so on game night. Why do the tons of other people with lingering symptoms go back to work? They have to work, maybe he feels totally fine, idk im just saying in the cases I've seen where they had it bad they generally took quite awhile to feel normalWhy would they suit him up with lingering symptoms? Or why would he come back with them?
You're obviously not well informed.I'm a physician affiliated with the University of Toronto that has actively treated COVID since the beginning of the pandemic in Toronto. It's my job to be informed on these things.
Why would I ever read anything coming out of North America?Regardless, some reading for you to do:
Duggan, N. M., Ludy, S. M., Shannon, B. C., Reisner, A. T., & Wilcox, S. R. (2021). Is novel coronavirus 2019 reinfection possible? Interpreting dynamic SARS-CoV-2 test results. American Journal of Emergency Medicine, 39, 256.e1-256.e3. Redirecting
Elberry, M. H., & Ahmed, H. (2020). Occult SARS-CoV-2 infection; a possible hypothesis for viral relapse. Medical Hypotheses, 144, N.PAG. Redirecting
Lafaie, L., Célarier, T., Goethals, L., Pozzetto, B., Grange, S., Ojardias, E., Annweiler, C., & Botelho, N. E. (2020). Recurrence or Relapse of COVID‐19 in Older Patients: A Description of Three Cases. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 68(10), 2179–2183. Error - Cookies Turned Off
Sabino, E. C., Buss, L. F., Carvalho, M. P. S., Prete, C. A., Crispim, M. A. E., Fraiji, N. A., Pereira, R. H. M., Parag, K. V., da Silva Peixoto, P., Kraemer, M. U. G., Oikawa, M. K., Salomon, T., Cucunuba, Z. M., Castro, M. C., de Souza Santos, A. A., Nascimento, V. H., Pereira, H. S., Ferguson, N. M., Pybus, O. G., & Kucharski, A. (2021). Resurgence of COVID-19 in Manaus, Brazil, despite high seroprevalence. Lancet, 397 North American Edition(10273), 452–455. Redirecting
Tillett, R. L., Sevinsky, J. R., Hartley, P. D., Kerwin, H., Crawford, N., Gorzalski, A., Laverdure, C., Verma, S. C., Rossetto, C. C., Jackson, D., Farrell, M. J., Van Hooser, S., & Pandori, M. (2021). Genomic evidence for reinfection with SARS-CoV-2: a case study. Lancet Infectious Diseases, 21(1), 52–58. Redirecting
You're obviously not well informed.
Why would I ever read anything coming out of North America?
''hypothesis''
''one patient''
''three cases''
Because he's a pro, and if he's not still carrying it and feels like he can play then he will as most guys want to be out there. I mean players play through injuries or sickness all the time, you can be fatigued, have brain fog and still be able to get it together for 20 minutes or so on game night. Why do the tons of other people with lingering symptoms go back to work? They have to work, maybe he feels totally fine, idk im just saying in the cases I've seen where they had it bad they generally took quite awhile to feel normal
You're obviously not well informed.
Why would I ever read anything coming out of North America?
''hypothesis''
''one patient''
''three cases''
I'm a physician affiliated with the University of Toronto that has actively treated COVID since the beginning of the pandemic in Toronto. It's my job to be informed on these things.
Regardless, some reading for you to do:
Duggan, N. M., Ludy, S. M., Shannon, B. C., Reisner, A. T., & Wilcox, S. R. (2021). Is novel coronavirus 2019 reinfection possible? Interpreting dynamic SARS-CoV-2 test results. American Journal of Emergency Medicine, 39, 256.e1-256.e3. Redirecting
Elberry, M. H., & Ahmed, H. (2020). Occult SARS-CoV-2 infection; a possible hypothesis for viral relapse. Medical Hypotheses, 144, N.PAG. Redirecting
Lafaie, L., Célarier, T., Goethals, L., Pozzetto, B., Grange, S., Ojardias, E., Annweiler, C., & Botelho, N. E. (2020). Recurrence or Relapse of COVID‐19 in Older Patients: A Description of Three Cases. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 68(10), 2179–2183. Error - Cookies Turned Off
Sabino, E. C., Buss, L. F., Carvalho, M. P. S., Prete, C. A., Crispim, M. A. E., Fraiji, N. A., Pereira, R. H. M., Parag, K. V., da Silva Peixoto, P., Kraemer, M. U. G., Oikawa, M. K., Salomon, T., Cucunuba, Z. M., Castro, M. C., de Souza Santos, A. A., Nascimento, V. H., Pereira, H. S., Ferguson, N. M., Pybus, O. G., & Kucharski, A. (2021). Resurgence of COVID-19 in Manaus, Brazil, despite high seroprevalence. Lancet, 397 North American Edition(10273), 452–455. Redirecting
Tillett, R. L., Sevinsky, J. R., Hartley, P. D., Kerwin, H., Crawford, N., Gorzalski, A., Laverdure, C., Verma, S. C., Rossetto, C. C., Jackson, D., Farrell, M. J., Van Hooser, S., & Pandori, M. (2021). Genomic evidence for reinfection with SARS-CoV-2: a case study. Lancet Infectious Diseases, 21(1), 52–58. Redirecting
I doubt that you actually work in the university if you post a list like this. Bolded some hints for you if you forgot the pyramid.
The KI study is also only about the antibodies, not about reinfection. The cohort is 400, which is not enough but it is clearly more than 3. Post the meta if you have one.
What do you mean he’s not ordinary? He got it didn’t he? I know tons of ordinary people that didn’t, what’s that say? Your arguing over nothing, I said originally I bet he most likely still feels some effects if it was severe, that’s it. You don’t need to be an occupational therapist no but clearly you don’t have any understanding of it. Just because he’s an athlete does not mean he can or will get over a sickness faster, in fact it’s the opposite. Look it up, athletes are actually more prone to getting sick because of the stress they put on their bodyYou're grasping. He's not an ordinary person and he wasn't going back to work till he was healed. I don't need to be an occupational therapist to know this. If he's slowed, it's probably getting back into game shape lol.
Yes.right. And Sweden is clearly the authority on COVID. Great track record there.
It didn't counter anything.You made a bold claim that could have negative consequences on someone’s health. I provided sources from well-respected journals that counters your claim.
You can continue to live in denial but don’t spread misinformation.
Yes.
It didn't counter anything.
What do you mean he’s not ordinary? He got it didn’t he? I know tons of ordinary people that didn’t, what’s that say? Your arguing over nothing, I said originally I bet he most likely still feels some effects if it was severe, that’s it. You don’t need to be an occupational therapist no but clearly you don’t have any understanding of it. Just because he’s an athlete does not mean he can or will get over a sickness faster, in fact it’s the opposite. Look it up, athletes are actually more prone to getting sick because of the stress they put on their body