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Long COVID is not the same for everyone: a hierarchical cluster analysis of Long COVID symptoms 9 and 12 months after SARS-CoV-2 test - BMC Infectious Diseases
Long COVID is not the same for everyone: a hierarchical cluster analysis of Long COVID symptoms 9 and 12 months after SARS-CoV-2 test - BMC Infectious Diseases
“Our results suggest that Long COVID is not the same for everyone.”
Our results suggest that Long COVID is not the same for everyone.
·bmcinfectdis.biomedcentral.com·
Long COVID is not the same for everyone: a hierarchical cluster analysis of Long COVID symptoms 9 and 12 months after SARS-CoV-2 test - BMC Infectious Diseases
Cognitive and psychiatric symptom trajectories 2–3 years after hospital admission for COVID-19: a longitudinal, prospective cohort study in the UK
Cognitive and psychiatric symptom trajectories 2–3 years after hospital admission for COVID-19: a longitudinal, prospective cohort study in the UK
“Participants had worse cognitive scores than would be expected on the basis of their sociodemographic characteristics across all cognitive domains tested (average score 0·71 SD below the mean [IQR 0·16–1·04]; p<0·0001). Most participants reported at least mild depression (263 [74·5%] of 353), anxiety (189 [53·5%] of 353), fatigue (220 [62·3%] of 353), or subjective cognitive decline (184 [52·1%] of 353), and more than a fifth reported severe depression (79 [22·4%] of 353), fatigue (87 [24·6%] of 353), or subjective cognitive decline (88 [24·9%] of 353). Depression, anxiety, and fatigue were worse at 2–3 years than at 6 months or 12 months, with evidence of both worsening of existing symptoms and emergence of new symptoms. Symptoms at 2–3 years were not predicted by the severity of acute COVID-19 illness, but were strongly predicted by the degree of recovery at 6 months”
Participants had worse cognitive scores than would be expected on the basis of their sociodemographic characteristics across all cognitive domains tested (average score 0·71 SD below the mean [IQR 0·16–1·04]; p<0·0001). Most participants reported at least mild depression (263 [74·5%] of 353), anxiety (189 [53·5%] of 353), fatigue (220 [62·3%] of 353), or subjective cognitive decline (184 [52·1%] of 353), and more than a fifth reported severe depression (79 [22·4%] of 353), fatigue (87 [24·6%] of 353), or subjective cognitive decline (88 [24·9%] of 353). Depression, anxiety, and fatigue were worse at 2–3 years than at 6 months or 12 months, with evidence of both worsening of existing symptoms and emergence of new symptoms. Symptoms at 2–3 years were not predicted by the severity of acute COVID-19 illness, but were strongly predicted by the degree of recovery at 6 months
·thelancet.com·
Cognitive and psychiatric symptom trajectories 2–3 years after hospital admission for COVID-19: a longitudinal, prospective cohort study in the UK
Research Shows Severe COVID-19 Contributes to Long-Lasting Cognitive Impairment - InventUM
Research Shows Severe COVID-19 Contributes to Long-Lasting Cognitive Impairment - InventUM

“We found persistent subjective and objective cognitive issues even two years after infection, including brain fog, word-finding problems, working memory deficits and reduced processing speed.” “Most Patients Have Never Fully Recovered”

“We found persistent subjective and objective cognitive issues even two years after infection, including brain fog, word-finding problems, working memory deficits and reduced processing speed.” “Most Patients Have Never Fully Recovered”
·news.med.miami.edu·
Research Shows Severe COVID-19 Contributes to Long-Lasting Cognitive Impairment - InventUM
Does Covid Lead to Dementia? Here's What the Virus May Have Done to Y…
Does Covid Lead to Dementia? Here's What the Virus May Have Done to Y…
Non paywall version of catalogued Bloomberg article
Scientists are worried that persisting cognitive issues may signal a coming surge of dementia and other mental conditions
·archive.is·
Does Covid Lead to Dementia? Here's What the Virus May Have Done to Y…
Writers and editors aren't even bothering to look at *their own articles* before publishing bad studies on lockdowns. It's disturbing.
Writers and editors aren't even bothering to look at *their own articles* before publishing bad studies on lockdowns. It's disturbing.

Note author of both articles is same person. We are in age of ALMOST UNIVERSAL cognitive decline and memory loss.

“Writers and editors aren't even bothering to look at their own articles before publishing bad studies on lockdowns. It's disturbing.”

·x.com·
Writers and editors aren't even bothering to look at *their own articles* before publishing bad studies on lockdowns. It's disturbing.
None of the 'lockdowns aged teen brains' media articles mention:
None of the 'lockdowns aged teen brains' media articles mention:

“None of the 'lockdowns aged teen brains' media articles mention:

  1. The study did not control for covid infection in a population where
  2. to QUOTE THE STUDY 'covid-19 was widespread'
  3. 100s of study show the covid virus infects the brain Off-the-scale journalistic malpractice”
·x.com·
None of the 'lockdowns aged teen brains' media articles mention:
SARS-CoV-2 is associated with changes in brain structure in UK Biobank
SARS-CoV-2 is associated with changes in brain structure in UK Biobank

UK researchers scanned the brains of 400 people before and after mild covid, compared them with controls and found:

  1. greater reduction in grey matter thickness
  2. greater reduction in global brain size
  3. greater cognitive decline
  4. greater change to primary olfactory cortex
·nature.com·
SARS-CoV-2 is associated with changes in brain structure in UK Biobank