Hubby is retired military (Go, Navy!), and neither one of us are getting the jab. The VA has sent him several letters and emails, encouraging him to get the vax. He talked to his PA about doing a blood test to check for antibodies since more and more doctors and medical professionals are saying natural immunity after contracting Covid is better than the vaccine. She told him the VA won't allow her to do it. When he asked why, she said they would rather he get the jab. Not much of an answer, I know, but her hands are essentially tied.
Fast forward a few weeks. Hubby went to a Fast Pace facility for a minor injury. The NP who works there lives in our neighborhood. They got to talking about Covid stuff, and he told her about the VA refusing to do an antibody test. She said, "I'll do it!'
Five days later, the results showed he still has antibodies from when we both had Covid last September. I decided to do the same, and my results were positive for antibodies as well.
I've been an RN for over 30 years. My understanding of most colds, flu, etc. is that you usually keep antibodies for that particular strain for 2-3 months, tops. The fact that ours are still in our systems for over a year makes me wonder if the theory about lifetime immunity to Covid may be true.
Has anyone else been tested for antibodies?
I have read that this thing was never isolated. Soooo... what did they test us for?
These people are misunderstanding the results of some court filings.
You can literally get the virus from the CDC or something for laboratory reasons.
That's exactly the problem. If this virus is so prevalent and contagious, why can't it be isolated from any sick person? Why must everyone go through a single, approved source to obtain a sample?
Also, these samples you get, to my knowledge, are "in silico" samples, meaning there is no physical sample, you only receive a digital copy of what the CDC claims is the viral genome.
Why anyone would trust these samples and claim this is legit is beyond me.