I did not see any mention of whether or not she had the Covid vaccine or how many boosters. I did see this posted which raised a red flag in my mind.
“They also found small blood clots on her lungs”
Well, I’ve had Covid, long Covid and Vaxxed.
Got rid of Covid in the hospital over 5 days (pre-protocols)
Got rid of Long Covid with 12 mg Ivermectin every other day.
Trying to get rid of vaxx-effect pericarditis with Tylenol, hydration and time. Just hoping at this point.
“long covid.” another mislead from a leftist news source with and agenda. how ever many they are (a million? i doubt they can prove it) they estimate a million, because a million is a big bad number.
and i love the “mild” thing. they love to use the word “mild” for stuff they’re in favor of, like the “mild” side effects of all their jabs. they use “mild” almost as much as they use “rare.” how could this have been a mild infection? struggling to breathe is never a “mild” symptom. then she was misdiagnosed and told her heavy chest and breathing was anxiety. right.
in short, i think “long covid” is less about the virus and more about damage caused by sars. they’re probably suffering from long term effects of sars and the damage it causes to organs and blood vessels microscopically if left unchecked or untreated early on. it’s not a “mystery” at all to the doctors and researchers on our side. or the disease caused by the virus (or perhaps even one of the vaccines that can cause similar damage). anyway my two cents.
I know people with long Covid. None were vax’ed. Covid can wreck organs. That was probably the design.
A couple months after my bout with Covid-19 and most of my lung capacity had returned as gauged by bicycle riding up hills; I have NO idea what this ‘long covid-19’ stuff is. A year and some months later I cannot tell that I even had the virus ...
I suspect a lot of people were out-of-shape to begin with when they contracted Covid. In March 2020 I had parked the car and rode the bicycle for errands to the grocery store, bank and city hall to pay the water bill, and spend a few hours in the library each day (to use their computers for iNet access) in most of 2020.