5 days?? I didn't get that message
Charpie said:
Y'all will get your results tomorrow
It will take about 3-4 weeks for the natural infection antibodies to flip positive. It should also bump your spike proteins though will be interesting to see.Tabasco said:
Me, wife, two daughters all vaxxed with pfizer. Two had covid as well (wife mid-January, daughter unknown... unsymptomatic or minimally symptomatic... only know due to 1st draw antibody early Feb).
Three of us are in the study, but my needle-phobic daughter declined. She tested positive for Covid Saturday (1st symptoms Sunday after Austin concert Wednesday which is where she caught it). Me (vax but never covid) negative. Other daughter (previous covid, plus vax) that was in confined car with her M/T/W is negative. Wife (vax and covid Jan 2020) no results yet, but will be negative.
Just throwing this out there for info, that obviously a Feb. Pfizer vax can still contact covid (was mild... stuffy nose, fatigue, and later loss of smell, which prompted test).
But what about when your employer requires it to come back to the office? I wouldn't get it either except now I have to either test every week or get the shot. They do not consider antibodies a substitute for the shot.ttha_aggie_09 said:Most of the data indicates that the possibility of reinfection does exist. The Israeli study indicated its more like 1 in 1,000 and the Ohio study found something like 0.67% of people tested positive again.harge57 said:wilsonag12 said:
I'm in the same boat Jack. Had in Mid July. Received my antibody results back and they didn't seem that high. Would like to entertain getting a boost from a vaccine, but now sure how long to wait and if it's worth doing?
Until there is some real data showing reinfections are occurring at something other than 1 in a million odds i will not get vaccine. On top of that I'm pretty sure of the reinfections that have occurred the symptoms are less severe than the first infection. I barely even noticed my first infection. Likely would not even notice it the 2nd time.
It appears that there is some disagreement over how long an individual can still test positive after initial infection. Most think it is > 90 days but it could be more with certain individuals. Most people don't take tests again after initial infection - primarily because if reinfection does occur. the symptoms are almost always milder. A few people have died from reinfection but they were sever covid cases first go around and elderly with comorbidities (based on the studies).
Most of the information out there hints at long-lasting and durable immunity but there is debate as to how long that may be... I think it is enough to keep me off the vaccine for now but am closely following the data and information in the event that it changes.
I did mine Tuesday. Talking to to lady at the lab, she said typically turn around time is 2 days. Some people get next day and other can take up to 5 days to post up results.BadAzzBohemian said:
Gave blood for test 1 - been over 24 hours, signed up on the portal, but no info provided as of yet. Is there another number to call or does it typically take longer?
aggiederelict said:
Took mine yesterday for the antibodies via the vaccine. I was surprised to see my levels were so high considering I got my second shot in Jan. Haven't been sick since this began. I'm wondering if I got an asymptomatic infection at some point.
AB level: 1902
aggiederelict said:
I didn't do this through the Texas CARES study. Just through my local lab. They were only looking at my antibody levels with respect to the vaccine if I understand it correctly.
So would I need another test to determine if I have a natural infection or does this test alone tell If I did or didn't have one?