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Study finds young US Marines without COVID-19 history at greater infection risk

Study finds young US Marines without COVID-19 history at greater infection risk
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Naval Medical Research Center continues Research in Fight Against COVID-19 > United States Navy > News-Stories

CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. - Naval Medical Research Center (NMRC) is continuing their ongoing study to determine the long-term effects of the COVID-19 disease to support Marines in the COVID-19 Health Action Response for Marines (CHARM 2.0) at Camp Johnson, North Carolina. CHARM 2.0 is a continuation of an initial study that NMRC began at Marine Corps Recruit Depot (MCRD) Parris Island in May 2020. The study is a volunteer progression-based assessment to monitor possible health related issues as a result of COVID-19 recovery, and the team has resumed evaluating the initial volunteers from across multiple Camp Lejeune tenant commands. U.S. Navy Cmdr. Andrew Letizia, the principle investigator for the CHARM study said the research provides a critical approach to understanding the long term effects of the disease.

Naval Medical Research Center continues research in fight against COVID-19 > United States Marine Corps Flagship > News Display

“This study helps understand the long term effects of COVID-19 amongst Marines,” he said. “It will also assist in understanding how a Marine’s immune system would be able to fight off new and emerging variants of the various SARS-CoV-2 strains, the virus that causes COVID-19, that are coming from around the world.” Letizia said the CHARM studies began in 2020, with revisits this year to assess the original group of recruits, now Marines. With the most recent update to the testing, the team is tasked with scouring across the country to continue research on Marines from the original study. “The study was conducted from May to Nov. 2020, and it followed Marine recruits entering boot camp,” he said.

DVIDS - News - Naval Medical Research Center continues research in fight against COVID-19

DVIDS - News - Naval Medical Research Center continues research in fight against COVID-19
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Study finds 10% of Marine recruits who tested positive for COVID before basic training did so again

Coronavirus reinfection may NOT be so rare: 10% of Marine recruits who quarantined and recovered from COVID-19 at the start of basic training tested positive AGAIN over a MONTH later Researchers looked at 3,249 mostly male Marine Corps recruits between ages 18 and 20 during a 14-day quarantine and six-week basic training A total of 189 had previously been infected with COVID-19 before arriving for the quarantine period and 2,247 had not been More than 10% of the previously infected group had a second positive test during basic training and 48% of the uninfected group tested positive Prior to the study, only three known people out of more than 26 million cases in the U.S. had been reinfected with the virus 

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