Trent Baker
BreitbartFri, 13 Mar 2020 17:07 UTC

© Fox News65-year-old Jerri Jorgensen, recovered from coronavirus after being quarantined on Diamond Princess cruise ship
Friday on
Fox & Friends, 65-year-old Jerri Jorgensen, a former Diamond Princess cruise ship coronavirus patient, detailed her sickness and the fallout since being diagnosed with the disease.
Jorgenson revealed after running a slight fever and feeling "a bit off" for a few hours on the cruise ship, she is no longer testing positive for COVID-19. She said the "hysteria" since she has gotten back home to Utah has gotten "out of control."
"The hysteria has just gotten out of control," Jorgenson declared. "All the toilet paper being gone — I don't get the toilet paper thing. I really don't."
She went on to discuss being kicked out of her gym at home because she once had the coronavirus to protect senior citizens despite being one herself.
"[W]hen I went to my gym, everyone was hugging me — even people that I didn't know were hugging me and saying, 'Oh, I've been following your story. It's so good to have you back.' Everything was great. I get home, get a call from management saying, 'We just need to be careful because we have a lot of senior citizens in our gym.' I go, 'I'm a senior citizen, wait, what about me?' And I'm the safest one in the gym — probably the safest person in Utah because I've been through quarantine and tested more than once negative," Jorgensen outlined. "It is what it is."
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Comment: And from the
New York Post:
Elizabeth Schneider, 37, had a relatively mild experience with the sometimes-deadly virus, for which she treated herself at her home in Seattle, Washington. So far, the Northwestern state has suffered the highest number of deaths — at least 30 — in the US from the disease.
Schneider, who has a doctorate in bioengineering, told the Agence France-Press she was sharing her story "to give people a little bit of hope." Her story is more common than one might think: US health authorities say 80% of cases have been mild. The remaining cases that needed hospitalization affected mainly citizens over the age of 60 and those with pre-existing conditions such as diabetes, heart disease or lung disease.
Schneider revealed how she first began experiencing flu-like symptoms on Feb. 25. The symptoms occurred three days after she attended a party that was later identified as the place where at least five others caught the bug.
"I woke up and I was feeling tired, but it was nothing more than what you normally feel when you have to get up and go to work, and I had been very busy the previous weekend," she said.
She felt a headache coming on around noon, along with fever and body aches. This was enough to cause her to leave her office at her biotechnology firm and head home.
The marketing manager napped but woke with a temperature that peaked at 103 degrees Fahrenheit that night.
"And, at that point, I started to shiver uncontrollably, and I was getting the chills and getting tingling in my extremities, so that was a little concerning," she said.
She took over-the-counter flu medication, and called a friend to be on standby in case she needed to be taken to the hospital, but the fever receded over the following days.
Schneider wrongly assumed she didn't have COVID-19 because she didn't experience the usual symptoms such as coughing or shortness of breath.
Her symptoms had already subsided by the time she was diagnosed. Local health authorities told her to stay at home for at least seven days after the onset of symptoms or up to 72 hours after they stopped.
Schneider's refreshing honesty about her condition is not unique. The Post reported Wednesday that emergency physician Dr. Yale Tung Chen from Madrid, Spain, has been live-tweeting updates about his own coronavirus after becoming infected while treating patients at the hospital where he works. He is currently quarantined at home.
Meanwhile, Schneider, who has been feeling better for the past week, has started venturing out on errands. She is still avoiding large gatherings of people and is working from home.
"If you think you have it, you probably do," said Schneider. "If your symptoms aren't life-threatening, simply stay at home, medicate with over-the-counter medicines, drink lots of water, get a lot of rest and check out the shows you want to binge-watch."
Still, she warned it is important to consider high-risk individuals and to stay home if you feel sick.
"Obviously it's not something to be completely nonchalant about, because there are a lot of people who are elderly or have underlying health conditions," she said. "This means that we need to be extra vigilant about staying home, isolating ourselves from others."
RC