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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

  • Collage showing a crate of rapid at-home COVID-19 tests, a map of mask bloc locations, a box of 3M N95 respirators, and a flyer from a mask bloc in Nassau County and Queens, New York introducing how mask blocs distribute free high-quality masks in their communities
    September 10, 2024

    A brief, oral history of mask blocs: Part 1

  • September 3, 2024

    “Perfect storm” of criminalization: Analyzing mask bans

  • August 13, 2024

    Q&A: NIH Director Dr. Monica Bertagnolli on next steps for RECOVER, future Long Covid research plans, and more

  • Sen. Sanders speaks at a January 2024 Senate hearing about Long Covid
    August 6, 2024

    Sen. Bernie Sanders introduces $10 billion Long Covid Moonshot legislation to support research, healthcare, education

  • June 18, 2024

    New NASEM reports offer broad definition, highlight the seriousness of Long Covid

  • June 4, 2024

    Black and Unbelieved: A conversation with filmmaker Chimére Sweeney

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Science

  • A cute white mouse perches on the side of a plastic bowl on a metal table in a research lab. The mouse has pink ears, nose, feet, and a long tail.
    August 5, 2025

    Research updates, August 5

  • Graphic with a background of a map of Easter Island, one of the island's famous statues showing a human face in the center, a colorful depiction of a molecule on the left, and a sheet of green pills on the right
    July 29, 2025

    Clinical trials are testing cancer drug rapamycin for Long COVID and ME

  • "Anatomical diagram showing different parts of the human neck
    July 29, 2025

    Research updates, July 29

  • Graphic showing the top of Berlin's TV Tower, edited to look like part of an IV tube. The graphic has a light blue background with white molecular structure diagrams in the top left.
    July 22, 2025

    Berlin Cures’ failed Long COVID clinical trial yields lessons on study design

  • A siamese cat with blue eyes wears a cone after a presumed trip to the vet
    July 22, 2025

    Research updates, July 22

  • close up of hands holding glucose meter
    July 15, 2025

    Research updates, July 15

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Covid-19

  • Map of New York State, with a variety of colored dots representing wastewater testing sites. The dots are colored according to SARS-CoV-2 detection level, with red/orange shades for higher levels and blue shades for lower levels. In the most recent data, 40 sites report higher levels (including many in NYC and Long Island, as well as Western NY), 60 report moderate levels, 15 report low levels, and the remaining 54 do not have recent data available.
    April 1, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, April 1

  • A set of four charts, titled "Regional Wastewater Concentrations." All four are line charts showing data from November 2023 through March 2025, with colored lines representing the four U.S. regions: yellow for Northeast, purple for Midwest, green for West, pink for South. The influenza A, influenza B, and RSV charts show clear waves over winter 2023-24 and 2024-25; the COVID-19 chart also shows a summer 2024 wave.
    March 25, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, March 25

  • Line chart titled, "SARS-CoV-2, All Wastewater Sites." The chart shows the national average of coronavirus readings in wastewater from across the U.S., representing sites in WWSCAN's network. The Y axis represents quantity of nucleic acids (PPMoV Normalized, x1 million) and the Y axis represents time, going from October 2023 to March 2025. It shows a major wave in winter 2023-24, a smaller wave in summer 2024, and then another smaller but longer wave in winter 2024-25, now plateaued at a moderate level.
    March 18, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, March 18

  • Chart titled, "Americans' Return to Pre-Pandemic Normalcy." Text at the top reads: "Thinking about your life before the start of the coronavirus, would you say your life right now is completely back to normal, somewhat back to normal but not completely normal, or not yet back to normal? If not back to normal: Do you think your life will ever get completely back to the “normal” that existed before the coronavirus pandemic?" The green line representing "completely back to normal" is at 47% in the most recent poll results; the dark blue line representing "no, but will get back" is at 13%; and the light blue line representing "no, will never get back to normal" is at 40%.
    March 11, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, March 11

  • Line chart titled, "National SARS-CoV-2 Wastewater Concentrations." The Y axis is "effective concentration, copies/mL" and the X axis is time, going from March 2020 to March 2025. The chart shows COVID-19's many waves in the U.S. over the last five years; the most recent weeks of data show a smaller winter peak followed by a high plateau.
    March 4, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, March 4

  • State-by-state map of the U.S., with states color-coded according to "Respiratory illness activity." Green represents low, orange is moderate, red is high, purple is very high, and gray is data unavailable. Most states across the U.S. are in the moderate or high category, with a few at very high (Wisconsin, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, New Hampshire, Kansas, Oklahoma) and low (Alabama, North Dakota, New Mexico, Nevada). Text at the bottom of the map reads: "Data last updated on February 19, 2025 and presented through February 15, 2025. View this dataset on data.cdc.gov."
    February 25, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, February 25

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Health

  • January 23, 2025

    Long COVID is a smoldering threat to wildland firefighters

  • Organizer Abby Mahler poses next to a blue wagon full of high-quality masks. N95 masks in different shapes and colors are visible, such as 3M Auras. Mahler is wearing a N95 and giving a peace sign.
    January 10, 2025

    COVID-19 advocates are distributing masks to protect Californians from wildfire smoke

  • January 6, 2025

    How America lost control of the bird flu, setting the stage for another pandemic

  • A DIY air filter, made with 18 fans facing out in different directions, is attached to a ceiling light fixture so that it hangs in the air above a dining table.
    December 24, 2024

    Invisible defenses: A guide for cleaner indoor air

  • December 24, 2024

    “Hardest f—kin years of my life”: Comedian Casey Frey says he may have Long COVID 

  • Portrait of Dr. Gemma Carey, with a forest green background
    December 23, 2024

    Dr. Gemma Carey, Australian public health scholar and Long COVID advocate, dies at 43

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Commentary

  • November 14, 2023

    Welcome to The Sick Times, a letter from our co-founder, Betsy Ladyzhets

  • woman in beige coat standing near white wooden book shelf
    November 14, 2023

    We want to hear from you! Take our reader survey

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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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