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Comfy Fleece Sweater posted:I still do that? Have you seen the videos of people licking things in supermarkets? Or people who are walking and eating ice cream while shopping and licking their fingers and then touching vegetables and smelling them and then putting them back on the shelf and *runs off and washes hands* I highly doubt there is a grocery store item licking epidemic. TikTok doesn't represent everyone.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 00:49 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 20:43 |
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how am i supposed to tell if the apples are fresh if i dont lick them??
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 00:54 |
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I saw someone drop a potato from the basket onto the floor at a supermarket a few weeks ago. You know the floor where hundreds or thousands of people's filthy shoes walk every day? He just picked it up and put it right back into the basket. Which is what I imagine most people would do. A shockingly large number of people don't wash their hands after going to the toilet. That is why you always wash your fruit and vegetables before you eat them.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 00:54 |
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E: I was trying to quote a few people and I haven't got the energy. I'm in Florida, they said you don't even need insurance to get regeneron for free here. You don't even need covid! I asked about my fiancee and they said she should make an appointment too, as she's been exposed, despite no symptoms or positive test yet. I was really sick yesterday with a fever of 102.5, but now I'm down to feeling like I have a cold with a persistent cough. I used to have athsma as a child so I know full well that getting cocky and assuming I'll be fine in 2 days could end up being weeks of a cough and then serious lung problems. I didn't say this to get the appointment, but I had pneumonia in my teens so I'm going to take whatever is available. I didn't have to ask, when they called me with the positive test results they offered it.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 00:57 |
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you might not have to pay for it, but the hospital or clinic is billing someone out the rear end to administer it edit: good luck though! Bad Purchase fucked around with this message at 01:02 on Dec 9, 2021 |
# ? Dec 9, 2021 00:58 |
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Fair! If it turns out nobody here has had it, I'll come back to do a trip report of what to expect. I fuckin hate needles and I know there will be at least 1.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 01:01 |
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Just interesting how different it is in different areas. The sheet they gave my wife when she tested positive a few weeks ago just gave typical OTC cold symptoms treatments, and said “if you feel worse, come in” and “if you have shortness of breath, go to the ER.” This is with very high vaccination rates in a Northeast state.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 01:06 |
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Fwiw that is not necessarily because they're better prepared in Florida, it's because they don't have the hospital space. If they took a "wait and see" approach, they wouldn't be able to admit you or treat you. Regeneron is being administered so widely and haphazardly because it's positioned as an alternative to vaccination. e: by all means get it, though! Anne Whateley fucked around with this message at 01:15 on Dec 9, 2021 |
# ? Dec 9, 2021 01:13 |
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I'm still not entirely sure it even does anything But also 90% of the people who get it in Florida are probably 2 weeks past the point they should've recognized that covid is real and started it
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 01:16 |
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Mu Zeta posted:I kind of hope covid hangs around forever because it's a great excuse for skipping the work christmas party which they are definitely having this year. You need a global pandemic to skip that poo poo?
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 01:18 |
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the antibody treatments are great but you have to start them really early, idk how effective they are if you're already a couple days into symptoms definitely get it though, can't hurt, will do some good
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 01:20 |
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Fritz the Horse posted:the antibody treatments are great but you have to start them really early, idk how effective they are if you're already a couple days into symptoms TBF the needle will definitely hurt.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 01:20 |
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I've skipped every loving work holiday party at the same job for 9 years. Spending even more time with people I saw 5 days a loving week over my partner/friends was a laughable option to me.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 01:21 |
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MarcusSA posted:TBF the needle will definitely hurt. I've had a central line IV (larger than normal needle in the jugular in your neck) so I might be desensitized to that. would be curious about their experience though, I don't recall any goon posting about what getting antibody therapy is like
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 01:23 |
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Fritz the Horse posted:I've had a central line IV (larger than normal needle in the jugular in your neck) so I might be desensitized to that. I just shivered a little reading that. gently caress... that poo poo... Yeah I'm actually curious how the treatment goes as well. You are right I don't think anyone has actually had it yet.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 01:25 |
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MarcusSA posted:I just shivered a little reading that. I might post a couple paragraphs about my hospitalization sometime. I was in for 10 days with really bad pneumonia in Feb 2020, not COVID. Three days on a ventilator. Probably a pretty similar experience to if I'd gotten severe COVID and "almost died from pneumonia" definitely was an incentive to not get COVID the last couple years.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 01:28 |
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Funky See Funky Do posted:I saw someone drop a potato from the basket onto the floor at a supermarket a few weeks ago. You know the floor where hundreds or thousands of people's filthy shoes walk every day? He just picked it up and put it right back into the basket. Which is what I imagine most people would do. A shockingly large number of people don't wash their hands after going to the toilet. Yeah, some people don’t lick sidewalks because they’re not particularly tasty I’m going to continue washing my fruit thank you, there’s plenty more bugs than Covid out there
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 02:25 |
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cubicle gangster posted:I got covid on Saturday - double vaccinated but hadn't had the booster yet - not been too sick but I'm booked in for regeneron tomorrow. I did a month ago. I felt tired that night but nothing else. e: Bad Purchase posted:^ if i remember right, antibodies and antivirals are more likely to help if you administer them before the infection is severe. if you're already a couple days away from a ventilator it's too late. so it's probably a "better safe than sorry" thing with maybe some "we're gonna make a lot from your insurance" added in. that's my guess anyway, without knowing the situation. Yes it needs to be within the first seven days iirc. In my case, I'm a healthy 36yo but I do have chronic asthma so it was a better safe than sorry scenario. I do still have a very mild occasional cough and a few asthma flare ups a month later so who knows if it would have been worse without. It's going to be a little more than $800 out of pocket for everything, saline drop, doctor visit, CT scan etc. I think the medicine itself it technically free. brugroffil fucked around with this message at 02:37 on Dec 9, 2021 |
# ? Dec 9, 2021 02:32 |
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brugroffil posted:It's going to be a little more than $800 out of pocket for everything, saline drop, doctor visit, CT scan etc. I think the medicine itself it technically free. What state are you in? I was told it's totally free even if I don't have insurance in Florida.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 03:25 |
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Bad Purchase posted:I agree deaths are underreported by quite a bit, and the 17 M number is pretty believable. I'm not so sure about the 1.9% rate though. This is why the the rate of deaths are reported as CFR (case fatality rate, using the number of confirmed infections) and IFR (infection fatality rate, using an estimation of the actual number of infections). IFR is obviously the more useful rate to know but estimates on the number of actual infections and actual deaths often vary wildly so it's usually going to be written as a guesstimated range of values with a guesstimated certainty. CFR is obviously always going to be higher than the actual rate of death but it's based on verifiable real world data so they can just spit out a single number which is often easier for the general public to digest.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 03:29 |
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cubicle gangster posted:What state are you in? I was told it's totally free even if I don't have insurance in Florida. Illinois. Florida is very much antibodies over vaccines so they may have different programs. The actual antibody treatment cost nothing. It's all the other tests, the saline drip, doctor visit, and immediate care room usage that added up.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 03:35 |
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Yeah the Regeneron push down in Florida was strongly connected to their anti-vax-mandate/"the cure can't be worse then the disease" approach to the pandemic where they downplayed vaccines and overplayed therapeutics, setting up Regeneron clinics all over the state in places like municipal libraries. Plus it turned out that one of Gov DeSantis' major sponsors was heavily invested in Regeneron .....Snowglobe of Doom posted:Good news, they realised there was an ongoing problem and it has now been FIXED
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 03:51 |
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My Little ICU Story, or "why you really don't want to end up on a vent" There are some lighthearted/funny bits to this but it's mostly pretty grim. I'll spoiler the description of the central line IV in case posters don't wanna hear about big needles. I didn't have COVID, but it's pretty similar to what would've happened if I had. End of December 2019 I was moderately sick with pneumonia. Cough, mild fever, exhaustion. I wasn't taking very good care of myself--stressed, not eating well, not sleeping well. I kept going to work when I probably shouldn't have since I wasn't that sick (or so I thought). About a week in I felt like I was doing better, had some relief from symptoms. Then one Tuesday at work, I started feeling flush and warm. I got home from work, took my temperature, it's 103F. I tell my parents who live nearby that I'm going to take some tylenol and lay down, I'm over the worst of the pneumonia and I'll probably be better in the morning. Half an hour later they show up at my front door and insist they're taking me to the ER. That saved my life. I was entering septic shock and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Within about three hours my blood pressure had dropped to something like 80/40 and I was in an ambulance headed to the larger regional hospital. When your blood pressure crashes like that, they put you on pressors to bring it back up. Pressors are very hard on your veins, so once I got to the ER at the big hospital they put in a central line IV which makes the pressors less rough on your veins. A central line IV is a larger-bore IV needle that's inserted into the jugular vein in your neck. Warning: description of big needle in neck: I keenly remember the surgeon tilting the bed back so my head was lower than the rest of my body. "You're going to hate me after this" he said, calmly. To install the central line the surgeon uses a handheld ultrasound to guide the needle. I remember small pricks as he administered local anesthetic to deaden my neck, the cool ultrasound gel and then a dull pain. It took maybe thirty seconds of dull pain to guide the needle into place in my neck. Mostly I remember the pressure, I could feel it pushing in. Then I was wheeled off to the ICU. They said I'd need to go on a ventilator because my lungs were filling with fluid and my blood oxygen was at 80% which is very bad. I don't remember anything between that and when I woke up three days later. Every day they bring you just short of consciousness, ask you how you're feeling. I don't remember any of this, but apparently they could barely keep me sedated and I was a huge smartass. A male nurse asked me how I was feeling one day when the sedation was reduced and apparently I scrawled on the little marker board "great dude wanna grab a brewski?" I also apparently kept writing notes asking how my students were doing and wanting to know if they'd gotten their assignments. When I woke up, the breathing tube was still in. Over the next few days it was a bit of a "game" as tubes were removed from me. A small celebration every time there was one less tube. When I woke up I had: -breathing tube (can't talk) -feeding tube -oxygen tube in nose -central IV in neck -urinary catheter -IV in one wrist -arterial blood line to monitor blood pressure and oxygen The breathing tube came out first. The nurse told me "when I remove this, try not to talk too much for a while, you'll be a little hoarse." Me, after tube removed, speaking for the first time in several days: "could I be a big horse??" I was on oxygen the rest of the time. They stepped my flow down slowly. I remember several times struggling to breathe as they gradually weaned me off. All of that wasn't so bad. The recovery after coming off the vent was much, much worse. It turned out I had both a viral pneumonia (HKU1 coronavirus) and bacterial (strep) at the same time and I'd ended up really sick from not taking care of myself. I was on antibiotics as well as steroids (prednisone) to reduce inflammation and lemme tell you, gently caress high dose steroids. I had to deal with both steroid psychosis and six weeks of slow withdrawal and tapering. Steroids make you feel amazing, on top of the world. You also can't sleep. So here I was coming off three days on the vent during which I didn't really actually sleep. I was manic. I felt amazing! I couldn't sleep. I was awake for more than 24 hours straight after coming off the vent. They gave me Ambien, didn't help me sleep, I just had visual hallucinations for six hours. Then the psychosis came. I started hallucinating extended conversations between three nurses just outside my hospital room door. They were plotting to kill me in my sleep. These auditory hallucinations were so realistic I was absolutely convinced I was going to be murdered by nurses. I couldn't sleep because the shadows were nurses surrounding me in my bed and talking about how to kill me and get away with it. Eventually I did manage to sleep, but the doctors were concerned I might have brain damage so I went for an MRI. It turned out I was mostly fine, but I had suffered a very very minor stroke (the tiniest stroke the neurologist had ever seen) when I was on the ventilator, which is common. It's very easy to get a small clot in your legs when you're sedated and have it shoot up into your brain. A week after coming off the vent I went home. I had to slowly taper off of the steroids over six weeks because of the withdrawal. I had deep fatigue, but also trouble sleeping. The joint pain was the worst. My knees ached so badly I couldn't walk. Two nights I tapered my dose too quickly and I laid there awake all night literally screaming and sobbing because every joint in my body was on fire. I was puffy from water retention. Eventually I got off the steroids. It took me another couple months to regain full mobility, I was using a walker for a few weeks then very slowly managed to walk normally.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 04:23 |
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naem posted:
Wow it's like the nationwide teacher shortage
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 04:32 |
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Fritz the Horse posted:My Little ICU Story, or "why you really don't want to end up on a vent" So you don’t recommend it, I guess?
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 04:38 |
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Snowglobe of Doom posted:This is why the the rate of deaths are reported as CFR (case fatality rate, using the number of confirmed infections) and IFR (infection fatality rate, using an estimation of the actual number of infections). Yes, thanks for making that clarification. That's a much more succinct way to get at the difference between the estimated number I was using (which I admit was likely too low for 2021) and the CFR data in that Johns Hopkins link I replied about. edit: just read the hoarse/horse story Bad Purchase fucked around with this message at 04:48 on Dec 9, 2021 |
# ? Dec 9, 2021 04:43 |
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Hippie Hedgehog posted:So where did Sweden gently caress up? Masks, and the elderly care. By not making sure staff at homes for the elderly had access to proper protective gear (N95/FFP2 respirators or even surgical masks, nor face shields) It’s weird that even now, the line isn’t FFP3. It’s what’s indicated for SARS, and the only reason SARS‐CoV‐2 has ever been treated as less airborne or less contagious is that it would be inconvenient to treat it otherwise. It was one thing when it was incredibly difficult to get PPE, but now that N95s are about fifty cents apiece again, and I can only assume that FFP3 are not much above that*, it’s time to treat it with the severity it deserves. That’s for aged care homes, anyway. I won’t criticize anyone for wearing FFP2 on their own time. I understand that FFP3 is rare at retail. I’m just saying that regulators could do better. *To the extent the standards are directly comparable, N95 sort of FFP2½. The filtration media is at a minimum of FFP2 grade, but the fit standard is more like FFP3. Lots of products are actually made to dual standards, just printed and marketed differently.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 07:03 |
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Fritz the Horse posted:My Little ICU Story, or "why you really don't want to end up on a vent" You’d have died in any non developed country dude
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 08:16 |
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Funky See Funky Do posted:I saw someone drop a potato from the basket onto the floor at a supermarket a few weeks ago. You know the floor where hundreds or thousands of people's filthy shoes walk every day? He just picked it up and put it right back into the basket. Which is what I imagine most people would do. A shockingly large number of people don't wash their hands after going to the toilet. I guess it's also why you boil and/or peel potatoes before eating them. (Did you know potatoes grow IN DIRT!!`?!!! They put fertilizer on them, which is made FROM ANIMAL poo poo!!!!!) I mean, if you were complaining about apples, you would have a point.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 08:49 |
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Hippie Hedgehog posted:I guess it's also why you boil and/or peel potatoes before eating them. You shouldn't boil potatoes, it's bad for them.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 09:15 |
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Hippie Hedgehog posted:I guess it's also why you boil and/or peel potatoes before eating them. The issue with potatos isn't fecal matter. It's a toxin, solanine, that can grow on raw potatos. In general, if you see a green part cut it off.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 09:28 |
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Hippie Hedgehog posted:I guess it's also why you boil and/or peel potatoes before eating them. Stop peeling your potatoes, that's where all of the nutrients and flavor is lol and boiling vegetables is like the worst way to cook them too, like literally last resort "I have nothing but a pot and some water and need to cook these vegetables" You should wash vegetables and fruits with edible skins, cause people are disgusting and nature is loving disgusting. This was true before covid as well lol I can't believe that people just bring home apples from the store and eat them right away, the very same apples that I've sensually licked and kissed, I'm there doing it in your store every night and no one seems to notice or care
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 10:07 |
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Holy poo poo, first it's this covid nonsense and you want me to stop going to restaurants, now you want me to learn basic food safety myself??????
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 10:13 |
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You mean you dont eat your potatoes raw? I just swallow them whole, like I'm a pelican
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 10:23 |
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People have told me about some bullshit they call "cooking" but I don't believe them. Everything is scavenged, and one day I will find a miscellaneous soups deposit of my own and open a restaurant.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 10:28 |
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Comfy Fleece Sweater posted:
yup! I almost died anyway. If my parents hadn't hauled my rear end to the ER I'd be dead, full stop. Not to mention how bad ending up on a ventilator is, your chances of survival on a vent are already not great.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 10:33 |
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The science evolved!! https://twitter.com/HeartlandSignal/status/1468721106068680708
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 10:59 |
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So as mentioned before we're going to Florida. I told my wife that if we went she might die as she has MS and is somewhat immunocompromised. She responded by getting extra life insurance. I just my pfizer booster Tuesday, and she had her third pfizer dose on the same day. We wear p100 rubber respirators. So, since we're going to Florida, and they have the Regeneron clinics, can we, like, just get it? It helps stop you getting Covid, doesn't it? She tried to get it here, but her neurologist couldn't push it through.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 11:38 |
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I wouldn't count on the booster kicking in within a week. Regeneron can be a preventive so I guess, since you're going regardless and they're handing it out, why not try for it. They may require you to have symptoms or test positive, so I wouldn't count on getting it, but it's worth a shot.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 11:53 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 20:43 |
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Regeneron’s EUA covers post-exposure prophylaxis, but not pre-exposure prophylaxis. That is, a doctor can give it to you the next day if your aunt crashes Christmas with a “cold” that is actually COVID, but they’re not supposed to juice you up prior to entering the plague wastes formerly known as “Florida”.
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# ? Dec 9, 2021 11:57 |