Tuesday, August 11, 2020

College Kids Need to Play Football!


“Little bit of a cough, a slight fever of 99.4, I think, for the first couple of days and then after that, I lost smell for about two and a half weeks and that was my only symptom for the entire two weeks,” Rollyson said. “On May 21 is the day I got my negative tests results finally.”

“I work outside, and I was wearing a jacket and it was 96 degrees outside and I was still cold,” he said. “I was sick again, on June 11 is when I started feeling it again. My fever ended up getting up to 103.4 for, like, two days.”

“Something from coronavirus weakened my immune system,” Rollyson said, “which caused me to have all these other symptoms and to end up with sepsis and all that. I wasn’t on a ventilator. I think it’s called BiPAP. It’s a mask that gets put on your face and it gets strapped on, and it basically does all the breathing for me.”

“I shouldn’t get my heart rate up right now because it can lead to cardiac arrest,” he said.

“I thought it wasn’t that big of a deal,” he said. “That’s the reason I posted on Facebook to my friends and family, take this seriously — I’m 21 years old and have a great health record, no issues, and it almost took my life. There’s no reason to take this lightly. I can’t urge people enough to take it seriously.”
What could go wrong?

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