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Coronavirus Reinfection Will Soon Become Our Reality

Coronavirus Reinfection Will Soon Become Our Reality Katherine J. Wu On its face, reinfection appears to be a straightforward term. It is literally “infection, again” a recovered person’s second dalliance with the same microbe. Long written into the scientific literature of infectious disease, it is a familiar word, innocuous enough: a microbial echo, an immunological encore act. But thanks to the pandemic, reinfection has become a semantic and scientific mess. Newly saddled with the baggage of COVID-19, reinfection has taken on a more terrifying aspect, raising the specter of never-ending cycles of disease. It has sat at the center of debates over testing, immunity, and vaccines; its meaning muddled by ominous headlines, it has become wildly misunderstood. When I ask immunologists about reinfection in the context of the coronavirus, many sigh.

Are We Finally Done Encouraging Sick Kids to Come to School?

Why Did We Ever Send Sick Kids to School? Sarah Hosseini © Adam Maida / Getty Images Staying home to avoid catching and spreading the coronavirus during the pandemic, for all the fear and anxiety it has caused, has come with one unexpected benefit for my family: My kids haven’t been sick once, not even with the common cold. My husband and I noticed this with a sense of relief after months of virtual schooling. We’re extremely fortunate that none of us have caught the coronavirus, but on top of that, our days and weeks hadn’t been upended by multiple colds or the flu over the past year. No missed work. No hospital bills. No sleepless nights.

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