Leukocyte count, a widely available and inexpensive clinical marker of inflammation, may help predict the severity of long COVID symptoms in postmenopausal women, researchers reported.
Women are more likely than men to develop long COVID, a new study finds, with the highest risk in women ages 40 to 54. Women ...
CDC testing data for the same period reveals that 6.6 percent of COVID-19 tests came back positive, with Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin seeing the highest test positivity ...
The covid wave this winter is less severe compared with previous years, with hospitalization rates down and wastewater levels lower.
The U.S. is seeing a "quad-demic" as cases of COVID-19, flu, RSV and norovirus spread at the same time. Experts said this is ...
The vast majority of people in a study with long COVID had experienced multiple SARS-CoV-2 infections over the course of a ...
U.S. sociologist Scott Feld wrote, "Your friends have more friends than you do." Feld's so-called friendship paradox states ...
Old Age, High NWR, and PCT may Predict Mortality in Hemodialysis Patients with COVID-19 suggests a new study published in the ...
Researchers at University of Tsukuba have found that contracting COVID-19 significantly affects fear levels. Mild cases tend ...
While the pandemic’s emergency phase ended in May 2023, the threat of infection remains a governing force in the lives of ...
Women have a higher risk for developing long COVID than men, according to study findings published in JAMA Network Open.