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Jahmyr Gibbs IS WARMING UP ON THE FIELD IN TALLAHASSEE
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<blockquote data-quote="YJMD" data-source="post: 742635" data-attributes="member: 1929"><p>I don't know the protocol they came up with, would have to look it up specifically.</p><p></p><p>A precise answer to your question is unknown, but a close answer is also stretching my knowledge. But yeah you need enough viral shedding to be communicable, and you need enough viral shedding to detect it on a test. But it you're tested negative on Saturday and positive on Sunday, at what exact time were you at risk of spreading it? Who knows. There are people that have more expertise than me to guess better, but if no one can be certain the answer is no risk, then you have to have a more conservative strategy. There are also false negatives, but determining how many is quite hard since RT-PCR is the gold standard. All you can do is reference tests to each other and look at epidemiologic data.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="YJMD, post: 742635, member: 1929"] I don't know the protocol they came up with, would have to look it up specifically. A precise answer to your question is unknown, but a close answer is also stretching my knowledge. But yeah you need enough viral shedding to be communicable, and you need enough viral shedding to detect it on a test. But it you're tested negative on Saturday and positive on Sunday, at what exact time were you at risk of spreading it? Who knows. There are people that have more expertise than me to guess better, but if no one can be certain the answer is no risk, then you have to have a more conservative strategy. There are also false negatives, but determining how many is quite hard since RT-PCR is the gold standard. All you can do is reference tests to each other and look at epidemiologic data. [/QUOTE]
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Jahmyr Gibbs IS WARMING UP ON THE FIELD IN TALLAHASSEE
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