Tell it, hater.
Testify!!!
fortune cookie poster
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Darrin's head is approximately as large and as wise as a cabbage, regardless of what he happens to be saying.
that dumb and may she burn in !
A personal belief on something that they have no knowledge or degree to understand??? It became political when trump made it political. It is just common sense and believing in science and experts.
dumb Darrin, stuck on repeat
Lame ad hominem
Wash, rinse, repeat
objective description, tbh
lol dumb Darrin policing logic
And posting 20-60 minute YouTubes with no comment whatsoever.
hates to disclose own take.
almost like he's ashamed of his own opinion, or afraid to offer it on an anonymous board.
beep boop
How COVID-19 can damage all five senses
The virus that causes the disease disrupts not just smell and taste, but all the ways humans perceive the world. For some, the loss may be permanent.
many people who suffered from COVID-19 discovered when they unexpectedly lost their senses of smell and taste. More recently, though, it has become apparent that a COVID-19 infection can also affect sight, hearing, and touch.
Blurred sight
Other people who’ve had COVID-19 have reported problems with their vision. A study published last year in BMJ Open Ophthalmology found that light sensitivity, sore eyes, and blurred vision are among the more common eye disorders experienced by patients.
Diminished hearing
Like Goldsmith, many people who recovered from COVID-19 continued to experience some auditory loss.
Tingling and numbness
A person’s sense of touch also can be affected by a COVID-19 infection, since the disease has been shown to cause persistent neurologic symptoms.
Loss of smell and taste
Perhaps the most recognizable effect COVID-19 has on the senses is the one-two punch of lost smell and taste.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/s...ll-five-senses
There's that white victimhood we've been waiting for!
Freedom![]()
Thats a meme
https://arstechnica.com/science/2021...have-symptoms/Among thousands of the earliest survivors of COVID-19 in Wuhan, China, nearly half had at least one persistent symptom a full year after being released from the hospital, according to a new study published in JAMA Network Open.
The study followed up with 2,433 adult patients who had been hospitalized in one of two hospitals in Wuhan early on in the pandemic. Most had nonsevere cases, but a small number had severe COVID-19 and required intensive care. All of the patients were discharged between February 12 and April 10, 2020, and the study follow-up took place in March of 2021.
Overall, 45 percent of the patients reported at least one symptom in that one-year follow-up. The most common symptoms were fatigue, sweating, chest tightness, anxiety, and myalgia (muscle pain). Having a severe case of COVID-19 increased the likelihood of long-lingering symptoms; 54 percent of the 680 severe cases reported at least one symptom after a year. But persistent symptoms were also common among the nonsevere cases, with 41.5 percent of 1,752 nonsevere cases reporting at least one symptom a year later.
the study: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jam...rticle/2784558
privileging economic growth over human health by refusing to manage the COVID-19 caseload is likely to have a long term negative effect on economic growth
The data echo that of other studies, which have also found that it is not rare for people with milder cases of COVID-19 to experience persistent symptoms. A small Norwegian study published by Nature Medicine in June found 55 percent of 247 nonhospitalized patients with mild-to-moderate disease had persistent symptoms six months after testing positive. A UK study involving 273,618 COVID-19 patients noted that more than half of nonhospitalized patients reported features of long-COVID within a six-month follow-up period. That study was published earlier this week in PLOS Medicine.
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