Koolbak, I honestly don't know what you think I was doing after I woke up with a sore throat. I was not out wandering around anywhere public.
I don't cough on people when I feel healthy, if I am even by myself and sneeze into paper, I wash my hands with hot water and soap and/or use hand sanitizer.
I started symptoms last Sunday, one week ago today.
I stayed home and have been in bed for quite a bit of that time, particularly the first few days. I am in bed right now.
My father was by himself with my mom's chihuahua/pomeranian yesterday. His toilet still does not work properly because I did not get a plumber to go over to check it out Monday because I stayed home believing I had a cold.
I hope I did not share it with anyone.
But yes, if any of you have a cold, you should isolate and probably get checked for Covid-19.
Dukasaur wrote:It's hard. A mild case of covid is virtually indistinguishable from the common cold. If you have a mild case, the first thing that comes to mind is that you have a cold, it's nothing. Only if your symptoms are more severe will you clue in right away.
A couple days before my first symptom I was at a restaurant with my in-laws. One was just getting over a cold but had tested negative for Covid. Another is an emergency Doctor. He may have caught that cold but also tested negative for Covid-19.
I (foolishly) thought I caught the same thing. We were all assuming it came from them since I was there eating and the rest of the time I wear a mask in public. Though I never thought a mask was 100% effective.
Maybe I did catch both that cold and Covid.
Two of the other three times I had been tested in the past, it seemed much more possible it was actually Covid. This time I felt like we were being over cautious and I was wasting a test.
I guess this is why the list of symptoms is so large.
Koolbak is right about a couple of things.
Though I have never knowingly been in contact with anyone that has had it, it's out there.
And the huge list of symptoms that should prompt testing is there for a reason.