@taylorlorenz *nodds in agreement!*
#KeepMasksOn FFS!
A new analysis using US Department of Veterans Affairs databases showed that reinfection is associated with increased risk of all-cause mortality, hospitalization and a wide range of long COVID complications in individuals who have had SARS-CoV-2 compared to those with no reinfection.
@twitterreject @taylorlorenz
Ditto for me. Got it in March 2020, 4 months off work, still kind of not full-time now (I am self-employed), still have issues with fatigue, brain fog, poor memory, stomach problems, etc.
Second time I had had vaccine and booster and it was mild luckily.
No 'can' about it. It does so in every instance. One of the problems with media portrayals of the dangers posed by SARS-CoV-2 is that the ineluctable is portrayed as elective contingent on host vulnerability. Nobody gets this without being maimed even if the damage is not readily apparent. I've never read a study where whole brain specimens from long term convalescent cadavers were virus free. Samples from acute phase deaths are a different story--permeation takes time.
@taylorlorenz If I were still alive I would be covered in booster marks and wearing N95s over all of my orifices.
Lucky for me coronaviruses cannot survive the Inferno of Eternal Damnation
@taylorlorenz TY for posting. A key point, made recently by journalist Kurt Eichenwald, is #2, that COVID-19 is a *vascular* rather than *respiratory* disease.
I'll add: Looking out for each other, including the most vulnerable among us, is part of what makes us human. The "it's my choice" BS is the antithesis of humanity.