Times-Herald (Vallejo)

In-law might bring a stowaway virus on visit

- Amy Dickinson

DEAR AMY >> My wife’s sister moved away from our town last summer, relocating across the country to be with her grown son and his family — over 1,000 miles away.

We’ve always had a very good relationsh­ip with her and her family.

Her grown son and his wife have refused to be vaccinated.

They all got COVID in February.

My sister-in-law got one vaccinatio­n shot but refused to get the second dose.

Now she plans to come here to visit a friend who lives near us.

She wants to spend a day with my wife and to sleep over at our house.

My wife and I have been vaccinated, and so has our son.

She will be flying here and will not be able to quarantine because she is only going to be here for a few days.

The fact that she will not be fully vaccinated really bothers me. Are we in danger?

— Worried Brother-in-law

DEAR WORRIED >> This is a question you should be asking your own physician or do your best to follow the (frequently evolving) guidelines issued by the CDC (cdc.gov).

If I were in your identical situation with a fully vaccinated household, I would not worry about a brief visit from a not-fully vaccinated person, but you and your wife MUST make this choice based on your own comfort level and health concerns, and the guidelines in your state.

Your half-vaccinated sister-in-law could conceivabl­y carry the virus to unvaccinat­ed people, but even if you caught the virus, your vaccinatio­n is supposed to protect you from the severest form of this illness. That’s the benefit of vaccinatio­n!

Is your sister-inlaw planning to ignore all the travel guidelines that should apply to her? Viral variants apparently affecting younger and healthier people might cause additional spikes.

Your sister-in-law claims to have already contracted COVID, and this might be her justificat­ion for not becoming fully vaccinated, but I would be skeptical about this. You should understand that — for whatever reason — she might be assuming a greater risk to her own health (and others’) than you are willing to assume for yours.

One way to handle this might be for you and your family members to welcome a visit with her, outside and distanced, but to decline to have her spend the night with you.

DEAR AMY >> Like so many others, I found out about a half-sister after a relative did their DNA profile.

We’ve met and she is very nice.

I was 9 when my mother took a six-month “business trip.”

I still remember this time. Abandoned and scared feelings were brushed off by the family members I was living with. I’m 66 years old, and those feelings persist to this day.

Be careful with those tests. It changed the way I see myself and family.

— Been There

DEAR BEEN THERE >> I’m highlighti­ng these DNA discovery stories so readers can see the variety of experience­s people have when confronted with this news.

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