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Long COVID defies understanding with some fearing it could be this generation s polio
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Prof Chris Whitty: Second man charged with common assault
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Tribute for NHS staff who have died from Covid-19 while battling for others
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BBC News
By Ella Wills
image captionEstate agent Lewis Hughes in video footage from the incident on Sunday evening
A man has apologised after footage emerged showing England s chief medical officer, Prof Chris Whitty, being accosted in a park.
Lewis Hughes, from Romford, told the Sun he was sorry for any upset I caused .
The video shows two men laughing and jeering as they grab hold of Prof Whitty, who struggles to free himself.
The Met Police are investigating the footage, which the force said happened in St James s Park in London on Sunday.
Mr Hughes, a 24-year-old estate agent, told the newspaper he had lost his job following the incident.
Just imagine one day you sit down to enjoy a hot cup of coffee only to discover it smells and tastes like something died in it.
Suddenly, you can’t walk past a bakery without gagging, the smell of onions makes you physically sick and even brushing your teeth is unbearable.
It sounds unthinkable, yet that’s the reality for tens of thousands of people after getting Covid myself included.
Most people know that losing your sense of smell and taste or anosmia, as it is known is a common side-effect of Covid.
This is where the olfactory nerve cells found high in the nasal cavity that detect smells are damaged and unable to send messages from the nose to the brain.