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Long-COVID improves in 50% of patients after a year in a Midwestern cohort.

Grant StalkerRosarie TudasAlpana GargLauren GrahamAndrew L ThurmanR Todd WiblinNabeel HamzehRobert J BlountRaul VillacresesJoseph ZabnerAlejandro P ComellasJosalyn L ChoAlejandro A Pezzulo
Published in: medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences (2024)
Overall, 51.2% respondents improved since their long-COVID began. Pulmonary symptoms were more persistent than neuromuscular symptoms (anosmia, dysgeusia, myalgias). Gender, time since acute COVID infection, and its severity didn't affect subjective status or symptoms. This study highlights recall bias that may be prevalent in other long-COVID research reliant on participant memory.
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