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Millions of Americans suffer from long COVID. Why do treatments remain out of reach?


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Posted

Screenshot_8.jpg.5f222a9c38fc233b71c2c4b7a61e9b82.jpgScreenshot_9.jpg.0901338590a9c233a0268d79f05aa28d.jpg

 

More than a year after catching COVID-19, Sawyer Blatz still can’t practice his weekly rituals: running for miles in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park or biking around his adopted hometown.

 

In many ways, the pandemic isn’t over for the 27-year-old and millions of other Americans. It may never be.

 

They have long COVID, a condition characterized by any combination of 200 different lingering symptoms, some of which, like loss of taste and smell are familiar from initial infections and some totally alien, like the utter exhaustion that makes it impossible for Blatz to walk much more than a block. 

...

Federal estimates suggest at least 16 million Americans have long COVID and maybe 4 million of them, like Blatz, who contracted his only COVID infection in November 2022, are disabled by it. 

 

(more)

 

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2024/02/26/long-covid-treatments-out-of-reach/72690587007/

 

 

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Posted

Probably because there are a variety of symptoms and no single cure.

It's like a spectrum disease, some have it worse than others.......

Posted
12 hours ago, TallGuyJohninBKK said:

Screenshot_8.jpg.5f222a9c38fc233b71c2c4b7a61e9b82.jpgScreenshot_9.jpg.0901338590a9c233a0268d79f05aa28d.jpg

 

 

 

More than a year after catching COVID-19, Sawyer Blatz still can’t practice his weekly rituals: running for miles in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park or biking around his adopted hometown.

 

In many ways, the pandemic isn’t over for the 27-year-old and millions of other Americans. It may never be.

 

They have long COVID, a condition characterized by any combination of 200 different lingering symptoms, some of which, like loss of taste and smell are familiar from initial infections and some totally alien, like the utter exhaustion that makes it impossible for Blatz to walk much more than a block. 

...

Federal estimates suggest at least 16 million Americans have long COVID and maybe 4 million of them, like Blatz, who contracted his only COVID infection in November 2022, are disabled by it. 

 

(more)

 

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2024/02/26/long-covid-treatments-out-of-reach/72690587007/

 

 

 

I have a near friend in Thailand who got a stroke only 5 days after his 5th Covid shot at the time. Last shot before stroke hit was a Pfizer. He has to learn to walk again on crutches, ands has been in a wheelchair for a while. Not sure if you can count this as similar to long Covid, but it's scary. 

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