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New study aims to improve the support and care for people affected by long COVID
A new £375,000 study led by the University of Stirling is seeking to understand the lived experiences and support needs of people suffering from the long-term effects of COVID-19.
The research ultimately aims to improve the support and care available to those affected by long COVID through the sharing of its findings with patients, their families and carers, and healthcare professionals.
The two-year study - which has received £299,883 in funding from the Scottish Government s Chief Scientist Office - will be led by Professor Kate Hunt, an expert in behavioral science and health, from the Institute for Social Marketing and Health (ISMH), and will involve colleagues from the University of Stirling, University of Aberdeen, University of Oxford, and the Nursing, Midwifery and Allied Health Professional Research Unit (NMAHP-RU).
Aberdeen Uni helps with study into effects of long Covid A new £375,000 study led by Stirling University - in collaboration with Aberdeen University - is looking into the long-term effects of Covid-19.
The research ultimately aims to improve the support and care available to those affected by ‘long Covid’ through the sharing of its findings with patients, their families and carers, and healthcare professionals.
The two-year study – which has received £299,883 in funding from the Scottish Government’s Chief Scientist Office – will be led by Professor Kate Hunt from Stirling in collaboration with Professor Louise Locock from Aberdeen, as well as experts from the University of Oxford and the Nursing, Midwifery and Allied Health Professional Research Unit (NMAHP-RU).
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IMAGE: A new £375,000 study led by the University of Stirling is seeking to understand the lived experiences and support needs of people suffering from the long-term effects of COVID-19.. view more
Credit: University of Stirling
A new £375,000 study led by the University of Stirling is seeking to understand the lived experiences and support needs of people suffering from the long-term effects of COVID-19.
The research ultimately aims to improve the support and care available to those affected by long COVID through the sharing of its findings with patients, their families and carers, and healthcare professionals.
The two-year study - which has received £299,883 in funding from the Scottish Government s Chief Scientist Office - will be led by Professor Kate Hunt, an expert in behavioural science and health, from the Institute for Social Marketing and Health (ISMH), and will involve colleagues from the University of Stirling, University of Aberdeen, Univers
The message that coronavirus does very little harm to children ‘might now be weaker’, a leading paediatrician has said, as new research suggests higher numbers than expected may be experiencing long term effects. Office of National Statistics (ONS) data found 13% of children aged between two and 11 across the UK were still experiencing symptoms including headaches, a cough or fatigue at five weeks and this rose to 15% in 12 to 16-year-olds. While attention has mainly focused on their ability to transmit the virus to adults, Debby Bogaert, a Professor of Paediactric Infectious Diseases at Edinburgh University, said the data showed there was a need to look more closely at the impact on children themselves.