HOW DO I KNOWIF I HAVE LONG COVID?
SLITHERING, TUMBLING ROBOTSHOW DO I KNOW
IF I HAVE
LONG COVID?Friday, December 16, 2022In today’s newsletter, we track down a scarily elusive diagnosis, get stuck dangling 60 feet above the ocean, examine why food allergies are multiplying, talk with a Himalayan king, meet the world’s last grass-eating monkeys… and glimpse an Amazonian ‘ghost.’PHOTOGRAPHS BY JACKIE MOLLOY
The negative test usually comes within 10 days of infection. But the symptoms can last for weeks, months, or more.
How come some people bounce right back from COVID-19; and a large chunk of others—from 5 to 20 percent—may end up with long COVID? Without a diagnostic tip to confirm it, what should you do if you suspect you have it?
First, take it easy. Don’t overdo it. “We’re a culture of high-achieving and of pushing through pain, and that’s the wrong advice for some conditions,” says Lucinda Bateman, a medical director for a nonprofit.
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What long COVID means? This fatigued patient (at top and above)begins a day waiting for the first of four doctor appointments. An active athlete, she had had to reteach herself how to dribble a basketball. Read more. STORIES WE’RE FOLLOWING PHOTOGRAPH BY JASON GULLEY A rare glimpse of the ‘ghost’ manatees of the Amazon(pictured above by Nat Geo Explorer Jason Gully) Why food allergies are on the rise How did metals from outer space end up in Somalia? Science may solve the mystery of who wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls Where the world’s only grass-eating monkeys thrive ‘Snakes’ on the moon? These helpers could soon join our lunar mission.Thousands of temples flood this sacred skyline A new highway threatens a remote Himalayan kingdom Are cures for some of the world’s deadliest diseases hiding in our sewers? Judge rules U.S. labs broke law by not letting research chimps ‘retire’ in a wildlife sanctuaryRelated:What do we owe former research chimps? WHOSE EYE IS THIS? PHOTOGRAPH BY KARIM ILIYA, @KARIMILIYAWhat creature is gazing? Hint: It’s an extremely intelligent and gentle animal that lives in family groups and spends much of its non-hunting time socializing. Give up? Click here for the answer.
Related:Researchers treat this gentle giant with respect
Also: See its hidden world and cultureWHAT ANIMAL IS THIS?IN THE SPOTLIGHTPHOTOGRAPH BY ANDY MANN, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION Magic, mystery, and love: In his latest epic, Avatar: The Way of Water, director James Cameron returns to the planet Pandora to explore brilliant alien oceans in hopes of inspiring audiences. “If they just love the underwater experience—and they love that sense of the profusion of life and the magic and mystery—then maybe it will reconnect them with what we are presently losing here on this planet,” said Cameron, a Nat Geo Explorer at Large, told Nat Geo. Watch the official trailer here.
Related: The real-life place that inspired the Avatar sequel(pictured above, a marine biologist explores a Polynesian lagoon)
Q&A WITH CAMERON
LAST GLIMPSEPHOTOGRAPH BY JORDAN SALAMA, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC What could go wrong? Nat Geo’s Jordan Salama was covering this stunning lighthouse/lodge—32 miles from shore—when he found himself suddenly dangling 60 feet above the ocean. “Whoops, hang on,” a fisherman calls up, calmly. “I haven’t dropped anyone—yet.” Salama survived the scare to tell an engrossing tale of this remote place. (He managed to get the image above as well).READ ONToday’s soundtrack: “Spotlight,” by Jennifer Hudson
This newsletter has been curated and edited by David Beard, Sydney Combs, and Jen Tse. Have a great weekend!
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