Greybeard33
Established Member
Moderator note - posts #1-#7 originally in this thread:
There is growing evidence of serious long term health issues among a substantial proportion of those who have recovered from Covid-19, including those in younger age groups who had relatively mild symptoms. See:
Latest Imperial Covid study
I was going to post this in the good news thread, but think it's worthy enough of its own thread: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/aug/13/up-to-6-of-englands-population-may-have-had-covid-study-suggests What they're saying is that based on 100,000 tests on adults, they're extrapolating...
www.railforums.co.uk
There is growing evidence of serious long term health issues among a substantial proportion of those who have recovered from Covid-19, including those in younger age groups who had relatively mild symptoms. See:
What is Long Covid, what are the symptoms and what help is there? | ITV News
The effects of Long Covid are far reaching, with a vast array of symptoms encompassing both physical and neurological that drag into weeks and often months. | ITV National News
www.itv.com
...a study by King's College London found an estimated 10% of people with the virus take at least three weeks to recover, with 250,000 people in the UK alone thought to experience symptoms for 30 days or more.
Many of those experiencing long tail coronavirus were fit, active people whose lives have been completely turned upside down by the ongoing symptoms.
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