- Joined
- 11 Oct 2012
- Local time
- 4:58 AM
- Messages
- 19,591
- Location
- SE Australia
- Website
- www.satnavsaysstraighton.com
It is infuenza A virus, in this country we normally get influenza B virus, there is a story on the BBC news app, a bit long winded so haven't read it all but it is basically a different strain of flu to what we are used to.
All I can tell you is when men get it they go straight to bed for a week and want to be nursed like babies.
Yes, but women just get on with life
All I can tell you is that it was a particularly bad strain this year (apparently, bearing in mind that my hubby had pneumonia and I had double pneumonia) and laid a considerable proportion of the population out with it (both sexes alike).
Plus it was not the strain expected so the flu vaccination didn't cover it. Mind you or version of pneumonia wasn't covered by my pneumonia vaccine either!
I've just spent the morning at the hospital, fallout from my double pneumonia checking that it had cleared completely and isn't lingering (all clear thankfully) and getting some baseline tests done whilst I'm well, so if I get ill again they will have something to compare it to next time around.
I'm now in Ikea grabbing a very late lunch (it's after 2pm) hoping to get my hair cut elsewhere and kill an hour or so somewhere else before picking my husband up from work. I may bale to going to a museum for an hour or so because it's pointless me driving home at 3:30 pm (it will take 45-55 mins to drive home) when my husband will have to finish at 4:30pm to catch the last train (ok there are only 4 a day) home and getting home at 6:30 pm with me having to collect him from the railway station at 6:10pm which will take 40-45 minutes of my time when if I just wait an hour I can pick him up at 4:30pm and us both be home for 5:15pm! Evening meal will be an hour earlier and he'll be less stressed, though I do know he enjoys getting the train from time to time, but he has to do it next week as well.
The problem is that with it being 33C outside, cloudy and humid I really don't feel like dragging the wheelchair in and out of the car!
At least I have my knitting with me which kept am old woman really happy talking to me in the respiratory clinic waiting room because it was so long since she had last seen anyone knitting socks. I'm just finishing off the first sock in 3ply extra soft cotton on 2.25mm needles (UK size 13, US size 1).
Curiously I also found out that my consultant trained in the UK and amongst the hospitals he trained in he was at the North Staffs Royal Infirmary (in Stoke on Trent (ish)), or what ever is current name is. He found Edinburgh and Dundee too cold so came to Australia instead!