Horse wrote: ↑Thu Jan 06, 2022 10:52 pm
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-59901547
The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned against describing the Omicron variant as mild, saying it is killing people across the world.
Recent studies suggest that Omicron is less likely to make people seriously ill than previous Covid variants.
But the record number of people catching it has left health systems under severe pressure, said WHO chief Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
So does flu. But since Covid, no one is mentioning how many are dying from 'normal' flu. Or from all the other life threatening illnesses that now aren't treated because Covid (and the NHS is basically broken due to Covid)
Potter wrote: ↑Fri Jan 07, 2022 4:17 am
Horse wrote: ↑Thu Jan 06, 2022 4:46 pm
DefTrap wrote: ↑Thu Jan 06, 2022 11:00 am Once everyone has had it they'll either be dead or meh about it.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-59895598
About 1.3 million people in the UK have "long Covid", symptoms lasting more than four weeks after an initial infection, an Office for National Statistics survey suggests.
Of those, 892,000 (70%) first caught the virus at least 12 weeks ago and 506,000 (40%) at least a year ago.
Not quite 'meh'. The person I knew who suffered badly was still having treatment 8 months later.
My guess is that a lot of those people have other complicating factors, like elderly, overweight or unfit, etc. In fact the latter two are probably present in the vast majority (if not all) cases. If you can't get your heart rate up to 75% max and keep it there for 30 mins without keeling over normally, then any nasty respiratory virus, or anything that damages your ability to circulate oxygen throughout your body, is going to flatten you. If you combine that with a sedentary lifestyle and being overweight, then it's probably never going away - unless you push your body through it and get it fit again.
And the other thing is that no one really knows how long 'long covid' will last for, my symptoms lasted for 18 months and then miraculously disappeared in a light-switch moment where I went from not being able to run 1km without being dizzy and out of breath, to running 6km a couple of days later and feeling like I was back to normal.
I'm convinced that if I had sat back and not pushed through that fitness barrier then I'd have had it forever. I battered away for six months getting dizzy and feeling wretched, running 4-5 times a week, until my body got back to normal.
I think I'm a weirdo because I was able to get my vaccines early due to being old and fat - 50+ (just!) and high BMI (in the obese bracket apparently)
However, neither time I had the virus did it seem to give me any hassle. Maybe genetics have worked in my favour. Maybe other things were higher up in the firing line in my system (menopause - untreated the first time/depression/totally being wiped out from a horrible 6 six months/3 year, the first time, of struggle with injury) - overall I think I'm pretty tough and healthy.
Equally, despite not being fit to look at (people do tend to judge on size!), my recovery rate from exercise has always surprised other sports people and I am relatively fit (as far as I was able to be in the last four years). So whilst the 'old and fat' tag was useful to get the vaccine, I'm not convinced I really fit that bracket properly!! LOL
I do know that one of my friends with long covid was overweight and unfit and although she's continued to go about 'normal' life as best she can she hasn't made a huge amount of effort to 'push though' (for women of a certain age, it's been talked about that various things can help, which I've shared with her to no avail; also, Vit D and it's cofactors have shown to be helpful - but again, not being used by this person). Despite that she is getting better than she was. But this is just a sample of one, so obviously I don't hold the 'getting better slowly' as something that will happen to all!
Who knows? Everyone is just guessing and I'm not saying that what I think is right. But it is one opinion and one that fits with a lot of people where I live. I don't know anyone for having a different one but I do just want work and life to go back to much closer to normal than it currently is!