Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
ABC News
ABC News
Politics
Tracy Bowden and Alex McDonald

Day 68 of feeling unwell: Mirabai returns a third positive COVID-19 test

Mirabai Nicholson-McKellar felt the first effects of COVID-19 more than two months ago.

She developed symptoms in mid-March after returning from Germany.

"I had a mild dry cough but I also had shortness of breath," she told 7.30.

She tested positive for COVID-19.

Given the all clear

The 35-year-old Byron Bay filmmaker thought she had recovered and on April 25 she received a letter from NSW Health.

She had gone 72 hours without symptoms and was free to leave isolation.

"It was very exciting," she said.

"I got to leave the house for the first time in several weeks, and I actually went down to the ocean and had a swim.

"I was fatigued and exhausted, but very excited."

But three days later, six weeks after the first symptoms, she relapsed and ended up in hospital.

"I had the onset of quite severe chest pain and tightness again," she said.

"They took another swab test and I tested positive.

"The second positive test was quite disappointing.

"I'm alone, I'm in pain, my chest hurts. I've never had this sensation before; fatigue and brain fog and I just want to rest all day.

"The symptoms, the way they kind of come and go and shift and change, it kind of sends you a bit loopy, like really, is this happening?"

Testing guidelines

According to data collected by NSW Health, 95 per cent of all COVID-19 cases recovered after six weeks.

Its guidelines state that a patient is considered recovered and free to leave isolation after 72 hours without symptoms.

NSW Health told 7.30 that if a patient tests positive 60 days after being diagnosed, it is possible they are still infectious and, in those cases, it is recommended they remain in isolation.

"One of the most challenging things about this illness, apart from its severity and length, is that there's so much that we don't know about it and so it's a really vulnerable place to be," Ms Nicholson-McKellar said.

A third positive test

On Monday, day 68 since her original diagnosis, Ms Nicholson-McKellar again tested positive for COVID-19.

"The medical advice that I've received during this period has been not so consistent. It's been very vague. And a lot of the times, 'we don't know' is what they say," she said.

"It's really such a struggle, with so much unknown and people and doctors and the health profession not being able to answer these questions of when will I recover? When am I going to stop being contagious? Am I still contagious?

"They don't even know that and I don't know that and it's really challenging."

Finding support

After weeks of isolation and feeling mentally on her own, Ms Nicholson-McKellar joined Body Politic COVID Support Group, an international forum for COVID-19 suffers run by Fiona Lowenstein, who has been hospitalised in New York.

"I can't tell you how incredibly important that was for me to not feel alone," she said.

"It just feels like it's been this crazy roller-coaster.

"To hear and share my experience and hear other people's experiences has been so incredibly supportive."

After more than two months in isolation, she just wants her ordeal to end.

"I just want to be better," she said. "I just want it to be over."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.