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  • Mold exposure can trigger and worsen chronic illness. Climate change will increase the risk.

    Mold exposure can trigger and worsen chronic illness. Climate change will increase the risk.

    Lorraine Boissoneault

    Almost half of buildings in the U.S. have mold or dampness, which can cause respiratory symptoms and may even trigger diseases like myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME). Read more…

Recent articles

  • A toolkit for new advocates: What I learned from the Long COVID Moonshot campaign
    Health, Policy & Advocacy
    Lisa Kava

    A toolkit for new advocates: What I learned from the Long COVID Moonshot campaign

  • Research updates, May 19
    COVID-19, Science
    Miles W. Griffis

    Research updates, May 19

  • What is the link between climate change and chronic illness?
    Arts & Culture, Podcast
    Melanie Marich

    What is the link between climate change and chronic illness?

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Trending

Breaking the vicious cycle: How two German scientists seek to solve MEBreaking the vicious cycle: How two German scientists seek to solve MEMartin Rücker
A toolkit for new advocates: What I learned from the Long COVID Moonshot campaignA toolkit for new advocates: What I learned from the Long COVID Moonshot campaignLisa Kava
Research updates, May 19Research updates, May 19Miles W. Griffis
Mold exposure can trigger and worsen chronic illness. Climate change will increase the risk.Mold exposure can trigger and worsen chronic illness. Climate change will increase the risk.Lorraine Boissoneault
RECOVER’s first round of clinical trials are failing. Will the next phase be better?RECOVER’s first round of clinical trials are failing. Will the next phase be better?Betsy Ladyzhets

Policy & Advocacy

  • November 5, 2024

    We set out to make our ‘invisible illness’ visible in South Africa with SICK Pride

  • October 29, 2024

    A brief, oral history of mask blocs: Part 3

  • A TV split-screen view shows Martha, who has medium length hair and glasses and wears a yellow and white shirt. She asks her question in the audience of a tv station set. Harris stands on the floor of the station wearing a black shirt and a brown blazer.
    October 11, 2024

    Kamala Harris responds to voter with Long COVID

  • October 8, 2024

    A brief, oral history of mask blocs: Part 2

  • Portrait of Tinu Abayomi-Paul
    October 4, 2024

    Tinu Abayomi-Paul, writer, disability advocate, and person with Long COVID, dies at 52

  • September 24, 2024

    Millions of Americans have Long COVID. Will Kamala Harris acknowledge them?

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Science

  • August 22, 2025

    The crisis is “exasperating”: Long COVID compounds economic hardship in Argentina

  • A bright collage of orange, turquoise, and terracotta that includes captivating, pink hollyhock flowers, a person with long hair in a high quality mask, ristras (red, dried chili peppers) and a black and white poster for the keystone symposia for Long COVID and other post-acute infection syndromes.
    August 19, 2025

    “The field is coming of age”: Long COVID researchers gather in Santa Fe to foster collaboration

  • A microscopic computer illustration of the aspergillus fungus. It appears like a protea flower mixed with an anenome, made up of bright red, yellow, and green "flowers" with red stems. It is very psychadelic and captivating.
    August 19, 2025

    Research updates, August 19

  • Collage graphic showing a monoclonal antibody infusion in progress (in blue) on the left and a pile of antiviral pills (in orange) on the right. Behind these images, there's a background showing a microscope image of SARS-CoV-2.
    August 12, 2025

    No “easy home runs”: Early Long COVID trials of Paxlovid and monoclonal antibodies failed, but the treatments still have potential

  • A photo of colorful Lego-like pieces making up a DNA double helix.
    August 12, 2025

    Research updates, August 12

  • Graphic showing vials of three JAK inhibitor drugs: Rinvoq, Cibinqo, Olumiant. The vials are shown with colorful echoes and the graphic has a black and white dotted background, creating a trippy vibe.
    August 5, 2025

    Three clinical trials for Long COVID are testing JAK inhibitors to treat immune dysregulation

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Covid-19

  • Line chart titled: "COVID-19 Nucleic Acid Amplification Test (NAAT) Percent Positivity, by Week, in The United States, Reported to CDC." The X axis represents time, spanning February 2022 to April 2025, and the Y axis represents weekly % test positivity for PCR and similar COVID-19 tests. Several past surges are visible, shown with an orange line: the tail end of winter 2021-22, summer 2022, winter 2022-23, summer 2023, winter 2023-24, summer 2024, winter 2024-25. As of April 2025, test positivity has been slowly declining for several weeks but is not as low as it's been in past lulls between surges.
    May 6, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, May 6

  • Map of the U.S., color-coded by state. The chart is titled, "COVID-19," and text at the top reads: "As of April 22, 2025, we estimate that COVID-19 infections are growing or likely growing in 4 states, declining or likely declining in 20 states, and not changing in 21 states." Four states are shaded in purple for "growing or likely growing": West Virginia, Alabama, Florida, Hawaii. Other states are in green for "declining or likely declining," gray for "not changing," or white for "not estimated."
    April 29, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, April 29

  • This graphic displays the estimated disease burden of COVID-19 during the 2024-'25 winter season. It includes estimated illnesses, medical visits, hospitalizations, and deaths, each represented as a range of potential burden and identified with icons. COVID-19 estimates: 8.6 million to 14.6 million illnesses, 2.1 million to 3.5 million medical visits, 240,000 to 400,000 hospitalizations, 28,000 to 47,000 deaths.
    April 22, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, April 22

  • Graphic showing a cartoon figure in a mask, with shapes of several states (Florida, Oklahoma, Missouri, Alabama) around them and a backdrop of colorful tape strips.
    April 18, 2025

    Missives from the dismissed: Still COVIDing without community

  • Chart from the CDC. Text at the top reads: "This chart shows national and regional trends of wastewater viral activity levels of SARS-COV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19)." The chart shows the past year of data, April 2024 to April 2025. National trends are shown with a black line, and regional trends are in different colors: yellow for the Midwest, purple for the South, light blue for the Northeast, teal for the West. All four regions had significant COVID-19 waves in summer 2024 and winter 2024-25; the winter wave led to less disease spread at its peak but was longer, and current disease levels are now higher than they were at this time last year.
    April 15, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, April 15

  • Chart from the CDC, titled: "Percentage of Emergency Department (ED) Visits Diagnosed as COVID-19, by Week, in The United States, Reported to CDC." The chart's X axis is time, spanning November 2022 to March 2025, and the Y axis is the percent of emergency department (ED) visits diagnosed as COVID-19. The chart shows COVID-19 waves in winter 2022-23, summer 2023, winter 2023-24, summer 2024, and winter 2024-25. Following the latest wave, the % of ED visits diagnosed as COVID-19 has been stuck at a relatively high plateau, with the most recent value (over 0.5%) higher than the lows in between past waves.
    April 8, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, April 8

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Health

  • February 21, 2025

    Trump commands HHS to terminate advisory committee on Long COVID 

  • A graphic based on Mexico's flag: green, white, and red stripes with an image of an eagle eating a snake on a cactus in the center. The red stripe is made up of many copies of the virus SARS-CoV-2.
    February 18, 2025

    Without clear clinical guidelines in México, people with Long COVID face gaslighting and erasure

  • A photo of the U.S. Department of Labor Frances Perkins building, in Washington D.C.
    February 11, 2025

    Now offline: Government resources about Long COVID as a disability

  • A screenshot of a CDC error page reading, "The page you're looking for was not found," with a red X drawn over it and a red background.
    January 31, 2025

    Breaking: Vital Long COVID data taken down following Trump order

  • An image of two people talking while wearing KN95 masks, against a background with a light green and white pattern
    January 30, 2025

    The “pandemic of abandonment”: Navigating friendships five years into COVID-19

  • A bright red and yellow graphic. At the center is a circular cut-out of text from the Affordable Care Act, with X-s for eyes and a mouth on top of it in drawn in black lines, and red spikes around the edges of the circle. There are bolded exclamation points on either sides of the cut-out text.
    January 27, 2025

    As someone with Long COVID, I’m terrified of what could happen to the Affordable Care Act

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Commentary

  • A parent cares for a sick child.
    July 16, 2024

    My daughter has Long Covid. It transformed me into an advocate for Long Covid kids.

  • July 2, 2024

    Don’t just breathe clean air, breathe it well

  • June 25, 2024

    My partner and I both have Long Covid. We tread the underworld together.

  • June 18, 2024

    I developed Long Covid while I was pregnant. It took 15 months to get diagnosed.

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The Sick Times is an independent news site founded by journalists Betsy Ladyzhets and Miles Griffis. We report on the Long COVID crisis, COVID-19, and infection-associated illnesses.

Contact:
editors@thesicktimes.org

PO Box 331009
Brooklyn, NY 11233

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