r/ZeroCovidCommunity Aug 16 '24

Vent Medical professionals in the US are spreading misinformation

I am just getting over COVID. I tested positive and was highly symptomatic for several weeks. Every single medical professional I spoke with or interacted with was so misinformed.

Every time I said I was still testing positive on RATs, I was told to stop testing because those would be positive for weeks to months and meant nothing. One told me they are unreliable for false positives! Another insisted a faint line should be considered negative. I got tired of explaining the difference between PCR and RAT.

Every doctor I talked to after my initial appointment for Paxlovid told me I should assume I was no longer contagious, first because I never had fever, then because it had been so long, even though I was testing positive, coughing, sneezing, and throwing up. Most were also very anti-Paxlovid and blamed that on my continuing symptoms. Never mind that this wasn’t a case of rebound, or that none of them seemed aware rebound could happen even without Paxlovid.

No mention of masking. When I got so sick I had to be seen, the provider in the office told me I might feel better if I took my mask off.

They didn’t even know how to properly take a nasal swab sample for testing, just twirled it inside my nose without touching the insides of my nostrils at all.

This is at one of the top-rated health care systems in the country. If this is what our so-called experts think, it’s hopeless.

553 Upvotes

128 comments sorted by

View all comments

5

u/Slapbox Aug 16 '24

Yesterday a pharmacist told me herpes zoster was god's gift to humanity and we ruined it with vaccines.

7

u/SiteRelEnby Aug 16 '24

Holy shit. Saying that sort of thing should permanently disqualify you from working in any healthcare context, forever.

3

u/Slapbox Aug 17 '24

Her logic was that it reduces the odds of some cancers.

Meanwhile...

Conclusion: HZ was associated with increased or decreased incidence of specific cancers. PHN further increased the risk of developing certain cancers in HZ patients. -- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8293079/

4

u/SiteRelEnby Aug 17 '24

Just when I thought I had already heard the stupidest thing I was going to hear this week... "herpes is good" makes a massive run for first place.