‘Good, not great’: Some long Covid patients see their symptoms improve, but full recovery is elusive

Original article from STAT by Elizabeth Cooney

How long does long Covid last? And what does it mean to achieve full recovery?

If you ask Joni White, she’ll tell you she just wants to feel like herself again — or something close to it. And she’s almost there.

Retired from federal law enforcement, White now describes herself as a glass artist but she’s been out of her studio for more than a year. On New Year’s Eve 2020, Covid-19 hit her so hard she thought she might die. Her infected but asymptomatic sister cared for her for three weeks in a house on the Outer Banks in North Carolina until her crushing headaches, chest tightness, and brain fog eased. But back home in Hillsborough, N.C., White’s headaches and brain fog were still there in April, along with frustration and depression at not being able to carry out what had been ordinary tasks, much less fusing glass into art.

She couldn’t do the finances. She’d forget where she was going. She struggled to figure out how to put up a ramp outside her house for her grandkids and dogs. “It was simple, simple math, but I sat here for two hours. I just couldn’t get it,” White told STAT. “The simplest things would make your brain get kind of crazy.”

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