MILWAUKEE, Wis. (SPECTRUM NEWS) - As communities across Wisconsin deal with days of change tied to Wednesday's Wisconsin Supreme Court decision which essentially ended Governor Tony Evers' Safer at Home order a week-and-a-half before it was set to expire, healthcare experts nationwide have also been dealing with changes to what we know for certain about the coronavirus dubbed COVID-19.

Enter Harvard Medical School.

Over the weekend, Harvard Health Publishing updated an original article posted in March, titled "If You've Been Exposed to the Coronavirus," including guidance about how long someone may be contagious, reliability in testing and whether people should consider self-isolation or self-quarantine.

"Most people with coronavirus who have symptoms will no longer be contagious by 10 days after symptoms resolve," researchers wrote. "People who test positive for the virus but never develop symptoms over the following 10 days after testing are probably no longer contagious, but again there are documented exceptions. So some experts are still recommending 14 days of isolation."

Researchers also broke down when symptoms may subside for someone suffering from COVID-19.

"It depends on how sick you get," according to the article. "Those with mild cases appear to recover within one to two weeks. With severe cases, recovery can take six weeks or more. According to the most recent estimates, about 1% of infected persons will succumb to the disease."

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