
09-13-2024, 07:19 AM
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Sage
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Join Date: Mar 2015
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ThirdOfFive
Serious questions here.
I'm 76 with several comorbidities: coronary artery disease, asthma, cancer diagnosis that thankfully went no farther than removal of one small tumor and nothing since. My wife is 72 and healthy as a horse. We're active people: a lot of tennis, golf, walking, etc. We keep our weight down, keep in shape, and most of all keep a positive attitude.
From day one, neither of us wore masks unless mandated to do so. We made it a point to associate with people who didn't wear masks. We both had COVID early on: I got it in 2020 (didn't know it until after it was over and a blood test during my physical confirmed that I had it previously)--not fun but I've had worse cases of the flu. My wife had it a couple of months later--barely sick at all and didn't even think she had had it until, like me, a blood test confirmed it after-the-fact.
I had the shot (one) in early 2021, not because I thought I needed it but I have family up north in a state where any edict from the loonytunes who run the joint is possible and as I travel there relatively frequently I thought it best to have proof that I did have the shot. My wife has never had the shot.
Neither of us have had so much as a sniffle these past two years - plus.
I know quite a few folks who have had it (only one that has died, but that was because of a heart attack while he was in the hospital well on his way to recovering from COVID). An odd thing...seems as if the folks I know who feared it the most, many after the vaccine and booster, ended up the sickest when they DID catch it.
The questions :
1. What part does fear play in the course of a disease in an individual; and
2. Did the FEAR of COVID, as peddled by the powers-that-be, have a positive, neutral, or negative effect on the course of the pandemic overall?
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Both interesting questions, but unfortunately it is an intangible postulate. Since we cannot quantify "fear", it is impossible to do a study to determine its effect either on individual illness or on a population.
Now, if you want something anecdotal, just look at the idiocy that fear of a vaccine produced in some previous posts on this thread.
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