x0rn t1_itdmtxo wrote
We just went through human parvo and right into Covid. There are a ton of weird viruses going around. Half the school is out sick. I feel like Covid made us more prone to viral infections, but that’s just a feeling, no evidence.
notabee t1_itf4mcw wrote
There is tons of evidence that Covid messes with immune function. Here's a few sample links just so some galaxy brain genius doesn't immediately jump in here with the always clever, "GOT ANY SOURCES?!!", but seriously just search for "Covid immune dysfunction" and there is a plethora of stuff to read about. And it's probably going to be relevant to kids too, despite their (usually) milder symptoms.
https://bmcmedicine.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12916-021-02228-6
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2796649
tony_sandlin t1_itf8m9a wrote
You must have had a bad experience with someone asking for sources lol
notabee t1_itfa2vx wrote
Yeah, I have, mostly on reddit. Not because having sources is bad, but because it has become a thought-terminating cliche that people like to use to dismiss bad news or concepts they don't like. Reading sources is good! And it shouldn't require someone hand feeding you sources to take some things seriously enough to spend some time looking into them independently. So many people just parrot shit, and many parrots think "got sources?" is equivalent to winning internet points.
sgrams04 t1_itfd49i wrote
>Reading sources is good!
Please provide a source for this
[deleted] t1_itfqfag wrote
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[deleted] t1_itg8jxv wrote
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NoBrains-NoGains t1_iti7o36 wrote
While many people use it as a brain-dead defense mechanism, if you are making big claims you should be reasonably prepared to provide evidence to support it. Tons of people pull information out of their ass on reddit too so it goes both ways.
edgarapplepoe t1_itgptqm wrote
Also the unseen damage covid can do might make recovering harder or exacerbate symptoms.
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