Oh, look - just in time, as schools are finally re-opening:
https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/educate-yourself-mom-warning-parents-of-mis-cs-link-to-covid-19-after-sons-near-death-experienceA North Carolina mother is encouraging other parents to be aware of MIS-C and its link to COVID-19 in children after her son’s near-death experience.
Nickey Reato-Stamey’s 12-year-old and only son, Rohen, has suffered for over a month from the crippling side effects from the infection that is associated with COVID-19 in children. MIS-C is an abbreviation for multisystem inflammatory syndrome.
After Reato-Stamey and her whole family got COVID-19 in December of 2020, she was hopeful that riding out the virus from home would be the end of it. But unfortunately, that’s not what happened.
"When he (Rohen) was sick with COVID, it was very brief. It was just one evening with a really quick fever and he was just glassy-eyed," Reato-Stamey said. "But other than that, it was super quick. He was not symptomatic for long, at all."
But THEN, a month later, he spiked a 105 fever, Mom tried to deal with it for three days before getting him off to the hospital, where they were baffled, but initially thought it had no connection to the Chinky-pox.
Medical staff immediately started running tests, and that’s when his mother heard the acronym MIS-C for the first time.
"Once we got there, they started saying, ‘We’re going to run some lab work but, there’s this thing called MIS-C, which is multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children,’ and he’s checking off some of those boxes, but not all of the boxes, so they weren’t ready to commit to that diagnosis at that time," Reato-Stamey said.
The night of his first hospital stay, Rohen took a "sharp downward turn" for the worse, according to his mother.
"He was not able to breathe, that’s when he had to be put on oxygen. The pericardial sac of his heart was beginning to fill up with fluid and the tissue to break down. His blood pressure plummeted, very quickly," she said.
Medical staff quickly scanned Rohen for blood clots and at that point, Rohen was officially diagnosed with MIS-C.
Rohen’s lungs were inflamed and full of fluid and his coronary arteries were enlarged and working overtime to help him survive this sometimes deadly illness.
Health care workers immediately moved Rohen to the PICU where his mother got the news she was dreading. Not only were doctors unsure if Rohen would survive, but they were also unsure of how to treat MIS-C.
Well, the good news is Rohen is home and getting better.
Is this a real thing? Did it used to be connected to what we knew as the seasonal flu, but now they've changed that to coincide with the WuFlu? Hard to frikken know because we will be, and are, lied to about everything in order for TPTB to further their narrative.
Oh, and Mom's advice is to keep doing everything she and her family, including Rohen, were doing when they all got infected anyway: MASK UP/social distance/yaddayaddayadda.