|
|
|
|
|
by sdenton4
1914 days ago
|
|
'Earlier studies focused largely on long-term effects in hospitalized COVID patients, McCulloch noted. "Our study is unique in characterizing a group consisting of mostly outpatients: 90% of our cohort experienced only a mild COVID-19 illness, yet one-third continue to have lingering effects," she said. '"Many of these individuals are young and have no pre-existing medical conditions, indicating that even relatively healthy individuals may face long-term impacts from their illness."' https://www.medpagetoday.com/infectiousdisease/covid19/91270 0.01%, 33%... Basically a rounding error, right? |
|
I’ll let the researchers do the talking here:
”Study limitations include small sample size, single study location, and potential bias from self-reported symptoms, the researchers acknowledged.”
This is certainly not a rebuttal to the fact that there have been hundreds of millions of infections globally, yet the cumulative evidence for “long covid” continues to be a vague constellation of self-reported, mostly mild symptoms in a tiny fraction of people.
If even .1% of 100M infections had severe, long-lasting damage, it wouldn’t be a debate. There would be hundreds of thousands of people to point to.