Sharing in case this helps someone.

The last time someone in our household got Covid, we were able to keep it from spreading to anyone else. ♥️🙏🏿 This time we were not so lucky. My Covid high score streak is finally broken! Rona got me y'all!

Completely unscientific observations of how this thing looks to have beat our mitigations:

Day 0: Contagious. No symptoms. Negative tests.

Day 1: Contagious. Slight symptoms. Negative test.

Day 2: Contagious. More severe symptoms. Positive tests.

Our family doesn't eat indoors, doesn't go into buildings unmasked, wears masks in dense outdoor situations, wears a full elastomeric mask when flying.

For the past few weeks, even when outdoors, I've seen a few friends coughing, and I immediately put my mask on. They then say, "No dude, relax, it's not Covid, I tested this morning!" And I said, "🙅🏿‍♂️ Sure! That's what 'Rona *wants* me to think! 😷" 4 friends this happened with, and all 4 tested positive the day after their little coughs.

Mitigations that worked last time:

* Positive person moved to the remote room in our house with its own sliding door to the patio

* Masking tape and rolled up towel put around the door to seal them in.

* AC run on not heat, not cool, but "move air" through the hypoallergenic filter.

* Feed the infected person by wearing a mask and leaving trays of food on the patio, like feeding Hannibal lecter!

* Me spending a week outnumbered by my toddlers, while my wife watches SpongeBob and relaxes

At first I couldn't figure out why the same mitigations didn't work this time, but then I noticed the pattern of who was getting infected and when.

6 people drove back on a 4 hrs road trip after 4th of July. The front passenger had sniffles, but tested negative. They tested multiple times in a row to be sure.

A theory: front passenger caught Covid during the trip and were on their "day zero, negative results" day.

Driver and passenger directly behind them had their "day 0," two days later.

On the "day 0: no symptoms, negative test" day, and "day 1: slight symptoms, negative test" day, I tried out another theory, and it kind of worked.

My hypothesis was that if you're able to spread covid, but your test is showing negative, then you're either testing wrong, or you're testing right, but the right method is not showing the right result.

We usually do the nasal and cheek and tongue swab.

So we burned a bunch of tests on everyone testing everyone multiple ways.

We tested:

* Nasal only
* Nasal, and tongue and cheek swab
* Nasal, tongue and cheek, and hold swab in air near back of throat and cough
* Nasal, and cough
* Just cough

Adding the cough turned "day 0 negative" into a slight positive test, and "day 2 positive" into a super dark purple line positive test. Darker than we've ever seen. 😬

My totally unscientific understanding of this, is that this is a "throat Covid," not a "nose Covid." And that the false negative rate is higher for this wave.

@mekkaokereke

No nasopharyngeal swab? That's what I use every time I test, on the understanding that it's the gold standard (and I've found it's not *that* hard to do on myself), even though the diy test instructions never mention it.

@tunguska

My dad (actual Dr and head of surgery, has run Covid overflow ward during horrible high fatality spike, lost co-workers to Covid), says nasopharyngeal is either much more or much less accurate depending on who's doing it. 🤷🏿‍♂️

If a trained medical professional is doing it, it's more accurate.👍🏿

But if you're doing it at home, most people are not going back far enough, and are going at the wrong angle. They're going *up* the nose, not *back* to the back of the throat.

@mekkaokereke @tunguska Other doctors call the proper Covid nasopharyngeal swab test Go Low and Go Slow.
➡️ not ⬆️
https://youtu.be/IjZotmeJHn4
COVID swab. GO LOW AND GO SLOW.

YouTube

@Kay @mekkaokereke @tunguska Huh… same rule as for smoking pork ribs; “low and slow”.

TIL