Hope you don't mind, I'm going to try to reply to as many points as I can in one post. Just for the sake of convenience.
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I think you're half catching what I am saying or half responding.
Most people recover or are non-transmissable after 14 days, but not all. And I'd say there is a consensus when the journal of the american medical association declares no confirmed cases of reinfection. I assure you that your state's dept of health and the CDC will be keenly interested in your 'reinfected' cases. Do you think you are the only one that's supposedly seeing these and that they have not been investigated. In addition, in the JAMA article I referenced, they specifically mention viral fragments being present and detectable for longer than the 14 days.
You say underlying 'immune' issues. Great, but she could have passed from kidney, liver, heart, etc issues. One case does not make a trend.
If you are just now aware of 3-8 active strains then perhaps you are not as in the loop as you perceive?
I call BS on the 1/3 having kidney issues. In fact, hasn't that been covered in this thread already? Of the 6 close family members I have in medical field, NONE are reporting kidney observations. And that's in 7 hospitals.
There are multiple reasons why anyone can misunderstand what they observe, or come to the wrong conclusion about the cause(s).
Of the 6 family in healthcare, none are reporting reinfection across 7 directly observed hospitals and an untold number of hospitals they deal with. We've got 2 MDs, 3 RNs, and 1 MHS who happens to run a large lab that directly tests for covid antibodies, nasal swabs, and all other manner of blood, specimins, etc testing.
However, that said, if the JAMA confirmed reinfection, in direct opposition to all what I am 'in the loop' on, I would believe them.