Half of Covid-hospitalised still symptomatic two years on, study finds More than half of people hospitalised with Covid-19 still have at least one symptom two years after they were first infected, according to the longest follow-up study of its kind.
While physical and mental health generally improve over time, the analysis suggests that coronavirus patients discharged from hospital still tend to experience poorer health and quality of life than the general population. The Guardian
See also:
- Health outcomes in people 2 years after surviving hospitalisation with COVID-19: a longitudinal cohort study (open access) The Lancet Respiratory Medicine
- World complacent on Covid, warns former UK prime minister Gordon Brown BBC News
- Covid: Superhero images unhelpful, says nurse chief BBC News
- North Korea orders strict lockdown with first official Covid cases BBC News
- England logs just 9,700 new Covid cases on first day of UK-wide daily stats being scrapped The Daily Mail
- SAGE models were too scary and held too much weight... says lockdown architect behind them! The Daily Mail
- Long Covid sufferers at far greater risk of blood clots, study says The Independent
- Impaired exercise capacity in post-COVID syndrome: the role of VWF-ADAMTS13 axis (open access) Blood Advances
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