Some COVID-19 long haulers in Minnesota still lack diagnosis Few doctors available for complex, multi-system care of Long COVID patients April 4, 2021 12:27pm Text size Copy shortlink:
Andy Flosdorf never had a positive diagnosis for COVID-19, because tests were tightly rationed by the state when his symptoms started in late March 2020.
But the 51-year-old health care consultant in Minnetonka is still feeling the effects of COVID a year later fatigue, brain fog, episodic chest pains and headaches. His so-called Long COVID symptoms were recently diagnosed as chronic fatigue syndrome, another poorly understood disorder. There s tired, there s fatigue, there s exhaustion. And then there s something past that, which is where I ve been much of the year since, Flosdorf said.
Dogs can have a little charcuterie, as a treat
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For Lent, this Michigan pastor gave up her pulpit
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UMass Medical School helps lead NIH RADx to accelerate new COVID test technologies
Project has increased U.S. testing capacity by more than 180 million tests By Susan E.W. Spencer April 01, 2021
While the acceleration of COVID-19 vaccinations has received much attention, the national effort to bring convenient, affordable and rapid testing technology for SARS-CoV-2 infection to market is also moving full speed ahead.
In addition to the original mission to make tests more available, researchers are investigating lingering questions about COVID transmission.
The $1.5 billion effort, known as the National Institutes of Health Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics initiative, or RADx, was launched in April 2020.