To answer the original question, the answer is no. Why? to answer this question, you have to ask yourself what are you going to do with the information? If you want to donate plasma, then yes. However, if your test is positive, do you believe that you can't get it again? the virus is new, so the value of the antibodies is unknown. If no are you going to change your lifestyle? or your viewpoint as a google expert just because you think you might have had the virus? of the people to whom I have spoken who have had the virus, there is no mistaken that they had it. One person said that he was so tired that after being awake for 4 hours after lunch that he fell asleep on the couch for another 4 hours for being exhausted. He lost his vision for awhile when his blood pressure crashed. His wife is a long time nurse who spread it to him.
anybody can be wrong, but trained and practicing doctors are much less likely to be wrong than google searching couch posers. So if you talk with the medical community on the front lines, of which i have a wife and family members, we haven't beaten the virus yet. The odds of survival are improved, but then there is the unknown future effects which have not yet been seen. . . and there will be some. . . . we just haven't even thought about that stage yet.
sportsguy
|