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Team creates simulation model to teach people how to perform at-home COVID-19 tests correctly
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Team creates simulation model to teach people how to perform at-home COVID-19 tests correctly
OMAHA, Neb. (Ivanhoe Newswire) – The CDC says those who have been fully vaccinated do not have to wear their masks. But more than one in three unvaccinated adults say they will not get the COVID-19 vaccine, putting reaching herd immunity at risk. That’s why proper testing is still crucial.
For the past year, this has been a familiar sight.
“People come out saying that they felt like their brain was impaled,” shared Christie Barnes, MD, an ear, nose & throat doctor at University of Nebraska Medical Center.
Regaining Sense of Taste, Smell May Take One Year Post-Covid
” width=”1024″>Credit: National Cancer Institute/National Institutes of Public Health. Many Covid-19 patient report that losing their sense of smell was one of the most disorienting sensations of anything that happened to them while they were suffering with the disease. Public domain
Those who have lost their sense of smell and taste after becoming ill with Covid-19 have some tough news to swallow as new research indicates that it may take up to a year for some people to regain these senses.
In a new study published in the
Journal of the American Medical Association, through its portal JAMA Network Open, researchers revealed that they followed a total of 97 patients who had suffered from the coronavirus and who had lost their sense of taste and smell for an entire year.