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The newly updated CDC webpage: www.cdc.gov...
Reinfection with the virus that causes COVID-19 means a person was infected, recovered, and then later became infected again.
After recovering from COVID-19, most individuals will have some protection from repeat infections.
However, reinfections do occur after COVID-19. We are still learning more about these reinfections.
Ongoing studies of COVID-19 are helping us understand:
-How often reinfections occur
-Who is at higher risk of reinfection
-How soon reinfections take place after a previous infection
-The severity (how serious the infection is) of reinfections compared with initial (the first) infections
-The risk of transmission to others after reinfection
originally posted by: Madviking
I think it depends. Some have pointed out that like colds and flus, this coronavirus mutates a lot. So, it's possible it can settle into a similar pattern.
It appears that first Delta now especially Omicron have mutated to more transmissible, less lethal.
a reply to: carewemust
originally posted by: GenerationGap
This is basically preparing the population for Vaccine Enhanced Disease. One of the symptoms of VED (itself a form of ADE - Anitbody Dependent Enhancement) is the constant contracting of Covid-19 everytime the immune system is exposed to it.
The vaccinated will be sick quite often should any of the emergency use vaccines cause VED.
They were warned that might be the case.
originally posted by: loveguy
a reply to: carewemust
Gain of function opens up so many avenues to venture into under the guise of safety.
originally posted by: Lebanon808
I was in the VA for 5 months. Got tested constantly. Always negative. Moved into my own place. Caught something a few days later. Over it in 2 days. I think people are worrying about nothing