snowball wrote: . . . the girls are really suggesting that I go to Utah tomorrow as there is weather coming in... one daughter wants me to get another Covid test but according to CDC I shouldn't be contagious now... so what's the point but guess I will go in and see what they tell me...
. . . dd's and I went to supper or so we thought the first choice was closed the second choice was filled to the brim and over flowing so we went to another it was closed and then the last choice was closed they went home I came home to soup...
. . . then controversy with another dd she wants me to get a negative test before coming down but if I'm not contagious why??? oh well as I said I will go see what they suggest
. . . sheila
Hello Sheila. I don't know how one would know, definitively, whether they are contagious or not without being tested (and I freely acknowledge that testing is not always 100% accurate). There have been many "break-through" infections, and infections spread by those with break through infections who are also without symptoms.
I also don't know if any of the exposures mentioned on the CDC website apply to you. . . but just thought I would post the link here (below), keeping in mind that CDC guidelines often change (and are updated) as more is understood about the transmissibility of Covid 19. Especially as questions begin to arise about how effective (or not) the vaccine (or even previous infection) is in preventing infection by variants.
I, personally (and this is just me), would not have close contact with my children and loved ones - at all - if there was even the tiniest possibility that I might spread the virus to any of them.
I am fully vaccinatated with Moderna, including getting my booster on November 5. My chances of exposure, or of coming down with Covid 19 are thus exceedingly small. This is not to say it can't happen, just that the chances are slim.
NONETHELESS, with my children and their spouses coming to my home for a few days over Thanksgiving, I will twice be giving myself one of the at-home Covid tests.
Why? Because why not.
I do realize that many ladies on here will think I am over-reacting. And perhaps I am. We all have our own personal level of acceptable risk. But Covid can be, and most certainly is, a life threatening situation. And, as mentioned above, CDC guidance regarding Covid 19 has changed in the past, and likely will change again as the pandemic continues to evolve.
I will not put the lives of those I love at risk, no matter how small the chances are. An at-home Covid test is extremely cheap insurance. I took the first of these yesterday, I'll take one again on Monday. I am doing this not to protect myself, but to protect those I love.
But, again, this is me. Anyone else's mileage may vary.
I also have not gone out much at all - especially to restaurants - during the pandemic, mostly because I live in a strongly "anti mask - anti vaccine" area. I don't want to be around people who willingly go out and mingle in public without knowing - or seeming to much care - whether or not they might be contagious.
But, again, that's just me. It's a free country after all, it appears that everyone can thus do whatever it is that one likes to do.
This from the CDC website:
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/your-health/quarantine-isolation.html?CDC_AA_refVal=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cdc.gov%2Fcoronavirus%2F2019-ncov%2Fif-you-are-sick%2Fquarantine.html"For Anyone Who Has Been Around a Person with COVID-19
Anyone who has had close contact with someone with COVID-19 should quarantine for 14 days after their last exposure to that person, except if they meet the following conditions:
Someone who has been fully vaccinated and shows no symptoms of COVID-19 does not need to quarantine. However, fully vaccinated close contacts should:
Wear a mask indoors in public for 14 days following exposure or until a negative test result.
Get tested 5-7 days after close contact with someone with suspected or confirmed COVID-19.Anne