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Medicine Slashdot.org

71-Year-Old Slashdot Reader Describes His 'Moderate' Case of Covid (researchandideas.com) 279

71-year-old Hugh Pickens (Slashdot reader #49,171) is a physicist who explored for oil in the Amazon jungle, commissioned microwave communications systems in Saudi Arabia, and built satellite control stations for Goddard Space Flight Center around the world including Australia, Antarctica, and Guam.

After retiring in 1999, he wrote over 1,400 Slashdot posts, and in the site's 23-year history still remains one of its two all-time most active submitters (behind only long-time Slashdot reader theodp). Today theodp shares an article by Hugh Pickens: I am a Covid Survivor," writes former Slashdot contributor extraordinaire Hugh Pickens (aka pickens, aka Hugh Pickens writes, aka Hugh Pickens DOT Com, aka HughPickens.com, aka pcol, aka ...). "I got the Covid six weeks ago and yesterday I was declared virus free. I had what was called a moderate case of Covid. I was never hospitalized. I was never in any real danger of death. But I was in bed for three weeks.

"It knocked me on my ass. I have been talking about my Covid when I go out and a lot of people are interested in what it really means to have a moderate case of Covid. I don't claim to speak for every Covid patient. I certainly can't speak for the ones who went into the hospital and are on ventilators. But I think the majority of people have a moderate case of Covid so I thought I would write this up for people that were interested."

During those three consecutive weeks in bed, "I guess I ate Jell-O for about two weeks..." Pickens writes. "I was laying in bed all day long. I was sleeping 12 to 14 hours a day..." He lost 25 pounds — and vividly describes having nightmares "every night like clockwork." But the essay ends with him committed to making the most of his second chance. "I'm only going to do what's important from now on...

"I'm 71 years old and I may have five more years or ten but I am going to live every day like it's my last."
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71-Year-Old Slashdot Reader Describes His 'Moderate' Case of Covid

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  • My covid experience (Score:5, Interesting)

    by irchans ( 527097 ) on Monday January 04, 2021 @07:47AM (#60893936)

    My eighty year old father got covid first and then I got it from him. I did not know that I had had covid until I tested positive for covid antibodies two weeks after I was discharged from the hospital. I blogged about it here.

    https://yacoronablog.blogspot.... [blogspot.com]

    • by zekica ( 1953180 ) on Monday January 04, 2021 @07:55AM (#60893948)
      My Covid-19 experience was mild: I had a fever just one day and I had no desire to eat for about 10 days. Like the author, after all symptoms went away and I tested negative, there was a whole week where I felt tired after doing anything. Interestingly, my father had fever for three days and during it he interestingly had nightmares almost exactly like the author.
      • by sg_oneill ( 159032 ) on Monday January 04, 2021 @08:51AM (#60894110)

        The bug is really weird. A friend in the UK is a youngish (Mid 30s) female GP who got Covid from the hospital. She had what she described as "the mild version" of the bug. Her oxygen saturation went down to the low 80s (bad) , she developed a nasty fever, coughed up blood and had a couple of Grand mal seizures(she does have epilepsy but never THAT bad). She says compared to some of her patients that's a pretty mild case. Some of her patients have severe brain damage , are permanently on ventilation until a donor lung can be found, some are needing liver transplants. Most including herself report neurological problems including poor memory and confusion.

        This is a VERY nasty disease. And if you think you ought just risk it and return to normal life before the vaccine arives, think again. You might have life time disabilities or worse if it gets out of hand.

        • by AleRunner ( 4556245 ) on Monday January 04, 2021 @09:36AM (#60894220)

          What's really scary is that people don't realise the high proportion of people that are affected. Although many people are asymptomatic, at one point people thought that most were asymptomatic we know know more than three quarters of people are symptomatic [bmj.com] so plenty of people that think they have had it actually haven't. Also we know that many young adults get organ damage [bmj.com] and other long term problems even if they were asymptomatic but the level just isn't clear yet.

        • by dargaud ( 518470 )
          Yeah, to the cunts who say "it's just like the flu", of the people who have symptoms, for 50% it's like a cold. For 40% it's like the flu. And for the remainder 10% it's either death or permanent / long-term damages.

          Personally I had it with symptoms unlike anybody else: I was deaf for 2 weeks and I had nothing else (I kept jogging, etc while wife was in bed).

          • by mvdwege ( 243851 )

            I had what felt like a slightly more serious attack of the flu, which progressed as real flu always does with me: 3 days of high fever, a couple of days of feeling meh afterwards. Now, that might have been ordinary flu, but this stupid country does not do antibody tests unless you're symptomatic, so I have no definite proof it was Covid.

            However: my running performance took a nosedive. I'd only recently started, and until my flu-like attack in March I was working up to doing 5km in about 30 minutes, and maki

        • by Trailer Trash ( 60756 ) on Monday January 04, 2021 @12:01PM (#60894766) Homepage

          There was a lady here in Nashville who had it for a couple of weeks and got over it. A couple of weeks after she got over it husband woke up to find her dead. The issue was the blood clots.

          I have a blood oxygenation meter and they're cheap and accurate:

          https://www.amazon.com/Oximete... [amazon.com]

          I check that every single day. Your blood oxygen level is one of the best indicators of having the virus and having problems even if you don't know it.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday January 04, 2021 @08:42AM (#60894092) Homepage Journal

      Even if the symptoms were not bad for you, now you have a pre-existing condition on file which may affect your ability to get health insurance. So far somewhere in the region of 20 million Americans are in the same boat.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • "You can get insurance, it just won't cover the illness you have." is the definition of useless insurance. Even if "most" insurance plans aren't useless - citation needed - last I heard there were many geographical areas with only 1 insurer in the market. If they aren't offering a "most plan", it's not really relevant.

    • I had a moderate case similar to the article but my mother contracted pneumonia and died. She was in her 70's but she was extremely healthy for her age.

  • by waspleg ( 316038 ) on Monday January 04, 2021 @08:05AM (#60893978) Journal

    who was half Hugh's age. I know people who were hospitalized and some who weren't, but a number who have been confirmed to have had it. No one knows the long term effects. YMMV.

    • I know of about 4 people who got it. At least 2 are still suffering effects months later, and they were not elderly. In my anecdotal size, it is almost 50% with long term effects.
  • by DeplorableCodeMonkey ( 4828467 ) on Monday January 04, 2021 @08:10AM (#60893982)

    "I'm 71 years old and I may have five more years or ten but I am going to live every day like it's my last."

    So he's either going to spend each day on his knees before God or doing lines of coke off a hot escort's ass. A little specificity would have been nice.

  • "Today theodp shares an article by Hugh Pickens:"

    It's happened! A Titan against a Titan!" [youtu.be]
  • I've known several people who tested positive for Covid-19 after displaying symptoms who were back on their feet in 10 days or less, without symptoms. Fever, cough, loss of taste/smell, the usual.

    Any case that leaves you bed-ridden for three weeks is pretty severe, even without the potential pneumonia.

  • Myself and my wife had moderate covid - I had a very bad cough for a week and felt a little fatigued , she felt a bit off. That was it.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by f00zbll ( 526151 )
      by your own definition, that is mild COVID19. I know a few people that got COVID19. One still has lingering health issues and gets fatigued easily. Any stress and it flares up. I know several families that lost their grandparents. If the doctors say he had moderate COVID19, I would go with their definition. Stay healthy and pray COVID19 doesn't mutate to something even more contagious and lethal.
    • And have you been aggressively checked for additional damage? Blood clots? Stuff that's going to come back to bite you later?

  • I had Covid in April (Score:5, Informative)

    by Arthur, KBE ( 6444066 ) on Monday January 04, 2021 @09:36AM (#60894218)
    (44 years old). And I would describe my experience as worse than a cold and less than a flu. I didn't have any respiratory issues.
  • Glad Hugh Pickens seems to be good.

    This disease is one of those that some people just don't understand. It did not help that a certain politician did not accept the problem. Nor did he work with the CDC, (who's job it is to help us with exactly this type of problem). This led far too many normally sane people to dismiss it as another flu, (the flu can kill too!).

    In the end, (July?), we will likely have many more dead. Perhaps not as many per year as heart disease or cancer, (the 2 biggest killers in the
  • Moderna flavor. Arm was sore for a few days. No fever, no tiredness, just a sore arm. I'll take that 100x over COVID. Waiting for the next dose. There's a bit of relief as my wife and I wondered how we'd handle being sick with 3 young, active kids, specifically the overpowering exhaustion and long sleeps/naps we've heard about people helplessly getting.

    I work in medical industry and the hospital I'm usually at decided not to give them to vendors, despite that I'm there every day and it would make sense

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by iggymanz ( 596061 )

      that was nothing, 2nd dose is the one that many people say hits hard

      • that was nothing, 2nd dose is the one that many people say hits hard

        Source?

        • Is mainstream news item from the makers' studies that side effects were more common after 2nd dose.

          https://www.statnews.com/2020/... [statnews.com]

  • I tested positive for the antibodies, but I never even knew I had it. I never felt the slightest bit sick at any point in 2020.

    Don't know when I got it or from whom.

  • The nightmares described sound a lot like an ayahuasca trip, but presumably with less vomiting.

    • Aspects of what he reported, notably conversations with specific people from the past, sound thematically similar to some of the sundowning episodes that I observed during end of life dementia care for a family member. We do not know enough yet about what this virus can do to brain and behavior, across categories of age and other pre-existing conditions.
  • I almost died of a mild case!

    A sack of rice fell over too, the world almost ended, so I'm gonna massively overblow the significance for my life!

  • My wife, three kids, and I all got Covid back in October. Last flu I had was worse. Kids barely noticed it. My wife and I were up out of bed after 3 days of fever. I had a mild cough that lasted 8 weeks and is gone. Smell came back after a week.
  • My wife and I (our mid 50s) both had it at the same time as one daughter (23). Our son (26) also lives in the house, so I have to assume he had it but there were no symptoms for him.

    This was in Mpls region, the week following Christmas last year (2019) - so we were some of the earliest cases, as IIRC only 1-2 other cases had been announced in MN by then, and 1 of them was in our county.

    It was a bad cold. In fact, that's what we thought it was, until later revelations dovetailed with
    - my wife noted at the

The key elements in human thinking are not numbers but labels of fuzzy sets. -- L. Zadeh

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