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Why did everyone in my household get COVID-19 except me?

Why did everyone in my household get COVID-19 except me?
RHONDELLA: A RECORD NBEUMR OF AMERICANS ARE RECOVERING FROM COVID-19 THIS WEEKEND, OR CARING FOR SOMEONE INFECTED. JENNIFER: HERE TO ANSWER YOUR QUESTIONS IS DR. SANDRA NELSON, AN ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR WITHIN THE DIVISI OONF INFECTIOUS DISEASES AT MASS GENERAL HOSPITAL. DR. NELSON, THANK YOU SO CHMU FOR JOINING US THIS MORNGIN. DR. NELSON: THANK YOU FOR HAVING ME. JENNIFER: WE HAVE THOUSANDS OF MASSACHUSETTS RESIDENTS TESTING POSITIVE. WHAT IS YOUR BEST ADVICE ABOUT ANTIGEN COVID SYMPTOMS AT HOME -- ABOUT MANAGING COVID SYMPTOMS AT HOME? DR. NELSON: AN INDIVIDUAL NDSEE TO IDENTIFY A COMFORTLEAB ISOLATION SPACE, ONE AWAY FROM OTHERS THAT HAS ADEQUATE VENTILATION. A LOT OF IT IS AROUND TAKING MEDICATIONS LIKE OPEN AND TYLENOL FOR SYMPTOMS DAN MAINTAINING HYDRATI.ON THER AERE SOME INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE AT HIGH RISK FOR MORE SEVERE DISEASE. THEY SHOULD REACH OUT TO THEIR PHYSICIAN STOEE IF THEY ARE A CANDIDATE RFO UP OUTPATIENT THERAPIES. HOSPITALS ARE BU.SY THE WEATHER IS VERY COLD. THAT COMBINATION MAY MAKE SOME PEOPLE RELUCTANT TO COME TO THE E.R. FOR COVID TREATMENT, EVEN WHEN THEY REALLY NEED IT. WHAT ARE SOME OF THE SYMPTOMS YOU WOULD WANT TO SEE RITGH AWAY? DR. NELS:ON FOR MOST PEOPLE, COVID-19 REMAINS A MOUNTED DISEASE FOR THOSE VACCINATED. THOSE ATIG HH RKIS NEED TO PREPARE FOR MORE SEVERE SYMPTOMS LIKE TROUBLE BREATHING, CHEST PAIN, OR PRESSURE. SOMEF O THOSE MIGHT BE ONCE WE DO NOT IDENTIFY IN OURSELVES. FOR THOSE HIGHER RISK, HAVING SOMEONE CHECK IN ON THEM IS IMPORTANT. THEY WILL OKLO FOR EVIDENCE OF DIFFICULTY BREATHING, DISCOLORATION AROUND THE LIPS OR FINGERTIPS, DAN CHANGES IN THEIR BEHAVIOR OR ALERTNESS. INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE LETHARGIC OR CONFUSED NEED TO SEEK EMERGENCY CARE. JENNIFER: LET’S GET TO SOME OF THESE QUESTIONS FROM VIEWERS. JOAN WANTS TO KNOW, IS ISAT FE FOR YOUNGECHR ILDREN TO WEAR KN-95 MASKS? MY GRANDDAUGHTS ERARE 7 AND 4. WHAT DO YOU THINK? DR. NELSON: THERE ARE TWO QUESTIONS, ONE IS SAFETY AT THE OTHER EFFECTIVENESS. WE KNOW ITS I SAFE FOR CHILDREN TO BE WEARING MASKS OF ANY KIND DETERMINED TO BE SAFE FOR ADULTS. THE EFFECTIVENESS QUESTION IS- DIFFERENT.IVENESS QUESTION IS- THE MOST EFFECTIVE FEATURE AROUND MASKS, ESPECIALLY KN95 OR K AIN 94 ARE DESIGNED WELL. MOST ARE DESIGDNE FOR ADULT FACES AND THEY WILL NOT GET A GOOD SEAL AROUN CDHILDREN’S FACES. IF YOU’RE LOOKINGOR F HIGHER EFFICIENCY FOR CHILDN REBEYOND A SURGALIC MASK, SOME OF THE MASK MODIFICATION IDEAS SUCH AS THE KNOT AND TUCK METDHO OR A DOUBLE TIE CAN BE MORE EFFECTVE. JENNIFER: DR. SANDRA NELSON, AN ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR WITHIN THE DIVISION OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES AT MASS GENERAL HOSPITAL. THANKS FOR
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Why did everyone in my household get COVID-19 except me?
Related video above: Boston doctor gives top tips for managing COVID-19 symptoms at homeAt this point in the omicron-driven COVID-19 surge, you’ve probably heard some version of this story at least once: One person in a friend or family member’s household tested positive for the virus, but no one else did. Or maybe it was in your house, when your roommates or spouse or kids all tested positive, but you kept getting negative tests.If the virus is so transmissible, how can people sharing bathrooms or beds have such different outcomes?"The research has indicated from the beginning that when COVID is introduced into a household, high rates of transmission occur, but I didn’t say 100%," said Dr. William Schaffner, a professor in the division of infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University. "Some people manage to escape even though they’re in close quarters with others. For some reason or another, the infectious agent doesn’t always infect everyone in close proximity."The same thing used to happen before COVID-19, too — a flu, cold or stomach bug would tear through a family, but some people escape.In most cases, uninfected people in the household are still getting exposed to some extent. But everything from your age to the date of your last shot will affect whether the infection actually sticks. The level of antibodies circulating in an individual’s blood is a key factor, said Dr. Peter Chin Hong, an infectious disease expert at University of California, San Francisco.Tracking the omicron surge: • Health expert answers questions about new omicron subvariant• The next phase of Moderna's omicron-specific booster trial has begun. Here's the latest• Hospitalizations vs. case counts: What COVID-19 numbers matter most?Antibodies are proteins made by your immune system that stop a virus from binding to your cells, or tag virus particles and infected cells for other parts of your immune system to destroy. They develop in both people who have been infected with COVID-19 and in response to the vaccine. Your body begins to make lots of antibodies immediately after a shot or an infection, but ramps down production over time. If you’re unvaccinated and have never been exposed to the virus that causes COVID-19, your body doesn’t know how to produce the right antibodies yet. What if you were unvaccinated and have never had COVID-19, but still didn't catch the virus going through your home? You may "have recently had COVID asymptomatically, developed antibodies and not know it," Chin-Hong noted.Immunocompromised people may produce fewer antibodies after being infected or vaccinated, making them more likely to catch COVID. Another factor at play is how long, and how closely, you’ve been exposed to infected people in your home. If you can completely isolate from people who are sick, including using a separate bathroom, it reduces the chances of spreading the virus. But keep in mind that most people are already highly contagious before they develop overt symptoms.The biggest wild card, though, may be human biology, including your gender and genes. "There’s so much we don’t know about transmission of disease," Schaffner said. "This is an area where genetic diversity may be playing into the likelihood in getting infected … Some people, just given their constitution, are more likely to get it than others, but we don’t know what those differences are."

Related video above: Boston doctor gives top tips for managing COVID-19 symptoms at home

At this point in the omicron-driven COVID-19 surge, you’ve probably heard some version of this story at least once: One person in a friend or family member’s household tested positive for the virus, but no one else did. Or maybe it was in your house, when your roommates or spouse or kids all tested positive, but you kept getting negative tests.

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If the virus is so transmissible, how can people sharing bathrooms or beds have such different outcomes?

"The research has indicated from the beginning that when COVID is introduced into a household, high rates of transmission occur, but I didn’t say 100%," said Dr. William Schaffner, a professor in the division of infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University. "Some people manage to escape even though they’re in close quarters with others. For some reason or another, the infectious agent doesn’t always infect everyone in close proximity."

The same thing used to happen before COVID-19, too — a flu, cold or stomach bug would tear through a family, but some people escape.

In most cases, uninfected people in the household are still getting exposed to some extent. But everything from your age to the date of your last shot will affect whether the infection actually sticks. The level of antibodies circulating in an individual’s blood is a key factor, said Dr. Peter Chin Hong, an infectious disease expert at University of California, San Francisco.

Tracking the omicron surge:

• Health expert answers questions about new omicron subvariant

• The next phase of Moderna's omicron-specific booster trial has begun. Here's the latest

• Hospitalizations vs. case counts: What COVID-19 numbers matter most?

are proteins made by your immune system that stop a virus from binding to your cells, or tag virus particles and infected cells for other parts of your immune system to destroy. They develop in both people who have been infected with COVID-19 and in response to the vaccine. Your body begins to make lots of antibodies immediately after a shot or an infection, but ramps down production over time.

If you’re unvaccinated and have never been exposed to the virus that causes COVID-19, your body doesn’t know how to produce the right antibodies yet.

What if you were unvaccinated and have never had COVID-19, but still didn't catch the virus going through your home? You may "have recently had COVID asymptomatically, developed antibodies and not know it," Chin-Hong noted.

Immunocompromised people may after being infected or vaccinated, making them more likely to catch COVID.

Another factor at play is how long, and how closely, you’ve been exposed to infected people in your home. If you can completely isolate from people who are sick, including using a separate bathroom, it reduces the chances of spreading the virus. But keep in mind that most people are already highly contagious before they develop overt symptoms.

The biggest wild card, though, may be human biology, including your gender and genes. "There’s so much we don’t know about transmission of disease," Schaffner said. "This is an area where genetic diversity may be playing into the likelihood in getting infected … Some people, just given their constitution, are more likely to get it than others, but we don’t know what those differences are."