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Long Covid limbo: some US patients wait months for diagnosis and treatment
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Susan Krikac stands for a portrait outside of her home on Wednesday, February 17, 2021, in Seattle. After testing positive in July, she is still experiencing various symptoms of Covid-19 today, seven months later. It was so isolating, Krikac said of the experience at the beginning. You re just afraid every night that you re going to die in the middle of the night. Credit: KUOW Photo/Megan Farmer
âWho knows if Iâll be myself again?â Covid long-haulers turn to Seattle rehab clinic Feb 23, 2021
Finding helpful medical care can be difficult for Covid-19 survivors who still experience long-term effects of the disease.
But a rehabilitation clinic for Covid long-haulers at Harborview Medical Center aims to help patients get back as much life as possible.
COVID long-haulers: The lingering sickness with no expiration date
February 22, 2021 6:15 PM Maher Kawash
SPOKANE, Wash. We know COVID-19 impacts people in different ways.
Some may not even feel like they are infected, while others spend weeks in the hospital or possibly even die from the virus.
Then there are COVID “long-haulers” those who are supposedly recovered, but still suffering months after their infection.
It is a silent suffering. You think you have recovered from the worst of COVID-19, just to find out your battle with this virus is only getting started.
“We may be dealing with a group of patients who has more long-term effects, not just three months, but a year or five years or indefinite effects,” said Dr. Aaron Bunnell of UW Medicine.