The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Omicron, me, and the fatigue that means it’s not ‘just a cold’

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Omicron wiped my Covid smugness off my face and left me in no doubt as to its potential to cause harm.

Only three weeks ago I was crowing to whoever would listen that I had unknowingl­y been sitting next to a lady for two hours at a charity event who tested positive for Covid the very next day.

Two women sitting to her right tested positive and I (on her left) tested negative.

“Some people might just never get it,” I mused, revelling in the thought that was probably me.

I sent a text to my sister – who lives in London and has had Covid twice – complete with a couple of strong arm emojis to emphasise the point that I had stared the virus down.

She replied that it likely saw me as an inhospitab­le host. You’ve got to love sisters.

Whatever the reason, I escaped it that day. And for the next two weeks I felt Covid-invincible – until I wasn’t.

And talk about timing. It was December 23. My sister and her family had just arrived up for Christmas and were staying with my mum and dad, who live right next door.

We had all spent the evening together, delighted to finally all be able to gather for the festive period after it had been so cruelly disrupted by Covid last year.

Then my husband started feeling unwell and tested positive.

Soon my youngest son and I were experienci­ng a scratchy feeling in our throats which we were constantly clearing.

By Christmas Day we were positive too.

Our experience supports the suggestion that Omicron moves fast.

With the original variants, the most common signs were fever, loss of taste or smell and a continuous cough.

But doctors are reporting Omicron patients are less likely to experience that classic trio of symptoms.

Instead, look out for fatigue and tiredness along with congestion, sore throat, cough, body aches and headaches.

On Christmas Day I woke up with what felt like the hangover from hell.

I had a bad headache and felt sick. I also felt like a storm was coming – and it did, that night when I was hit by a wave of body aches, muscle spasms (in one of my toes, bizarrely) and shivers.

Overnight I woke in a cold sweat, another reported Omicron symptom.

Come Boxing Day morning I felt like I’d been weightlift­ing. The muscles in my shoulders and top of my arms were sore, stiff and heavy. It was like nothing I’ve experience­d before.

Because of a lack of data, the UK Government has yet to update or add to those three core symptoms listed on its site for booking a free PCR test.

Having had a positive lateral flow, I ignored the advice and went ahead anyway.

Sure enough the PCR came back positive on December 27.

By now I was experienci­ng heavy congestion as the virus made its way into my sinuses, along with extreme fatigue.

I say extreme because at times in the day I would feel as if I was lying under a heavily weighted blanket.

Curiously, other times I’d feel not too bad and it became a running joke that I’d announce, ‘I’ve turned a corner,’ only to find myself right back at my starting point again.

I kept telling myself that

I had been for the booster (just a week before falling ill) and that this would be a mild, brief illness.

After all, that’s how it was being portrayed in some parts of the press and on social media.

I Googled “Omicron symptoms”, “how long does Omicron last?”, and every other search variable around Omicron to give me some pointers as to when this would end.

Then I read an interview with the South African doctor, Dr Angelique Coetzee, who first raised the alarm over Omicron.

In it, she talked about her “patient zero”, a young man in his early 30s who came to her complainin­g of extreme fatigue and body aches which he’d been experienci­ng for days.

And that’s when it dawned on me that just because doctors describe Omicron symptoms as being mainly mild, it doesn’t mean it’s just a cold.

By mild they mean that in most cases, patients will not require medical treatment.

At no point in my illness would I have even needed to consult a doctor. It was all treatable with self-care.

But the disruption to my everyday life was way more than a common virus.

I struggled with sinusitis and exhaustion for more than a week. And now, nearly two weeks on, I’m not quite back to full strength, though I am able to work again.

Research by the UK Health Security Agency suggests patients with Omicron are between 50 and 70% less likely to require hospital treatment than previous variants.

That’s something. But this is still a nasty, highlytran­smissible virus – and in many cases, it’s not “just a cold”.

My eldest son was the only one to escape infection in our house.

He has been crowing about being Covidinvin­cible ever since.

I’ve warned him that’s maybe not the smartest idea.

At times in the day I would feel as if I was lying under a heavily weighted blanket

 ?? ?? UPDATE: UK Health Secretary Sajid Javid meets staff in a Covid intensive care unit on a visit to King’s College Hospital in London.
UPDATE: UK Health Secretary Sajid Javid meets staff in a Covid intensive care unit on a visit to King’s College Hospital in London.

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