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  • “Not a whole lot of substance”: HHS posts Long COVID website, six months after making big promises

    “Not a whole lot of substance”: HHS posts Long COVID website, six months after making big promises

    Betsy Ladyzhets

    New website receives mixed reviews from Long COVID advocates and researchers; some do not expect to see any meaningful support from the Trump administration. Read more…

Recent articles

  • National COVID-19 trends, March 31
    COVID-19
    Betsy Ladyzhets

    National COVID-19 trends, March 31

  • Research updates, March 31
    Science
    Miles W. Griffis

    Research updates, March 31

  • California clinicians gather for Long COVID forum. Recent guides offer direction.
    Health
    Miles W. Griffis

    California clinicians gather for Long COVID forum. Recent guides offer direction.

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California clinicians gather for Long COVID forum. Recent guides offer direction.California clinicians gather for Long COVID forum. Recent guides offer direction.Miles W. Griffis
A new aid in the doctor’s office: Introducing the Long COVID Treatment GuideA new aid in the doctor’s office: Introducing the Long COVID Treatment Guidesick times
“Not a whole lot of substance”: HHS posts Long COVID website, six months after making big promises“Not a whole lot of substance”: HHS posts Long COVID website, six months after making big promisesBetsy Ladyzhets
“It felt like a life-or-death choice”: Pregnancy with Long COVID has many unknowns“It felt like a life-or-death choice”: Pregnancy with Long COVID has many unknownsMaddi Dellplain
Comic: Reasons to wear a mask in 2026Comic: Reasons to wear a mask in 2026sick times

Policy & Advocacy

  • A group of people are pictured lying down in a public square, with a sign in the center of the demonstration reading, "5 years of Long COVID, half a decade of neglect. It's time to make it visible." Some members of the group are also holding signs drawing attention to Long COVID, and many are wearing high-quality masks.
    March 15, 2025

    Live blog: International demonstrations ignite for Long COVID Awareness Day

  • A disease awareness ribbon in the colors teal and gray sits on top of a watercolor map of the world.
    March 14, 2025

    Our community came together to start International Long COVID Awareness Day in 2023. Here’s how you can get involved this year.

  • Photo of Rory Preston with a black and white filter, in front of a blue background with white strings of code and a design evoking biochemistry diagrams
    March 11, 2025

    Accurate statistics for ME and Long COVID are vital. That’s why I started a patient-led organization to “crunch” the diseases.

  • View of a federal building, with a black and white filter and other adjustments to create a harsh tone. The image has also been cut to evoke severe job cuts across the federal government.
    March 3, 2025

    Federal workers with Long COVID face firings, loss of accommodations, and more challenges under Trump

  • February 21, 2025

    Trump commands HHS to terminate advisory committee on Long COVID 

  • 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

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Science

  • A close up profile of a child wearing a teal KN94 respirator
    October 7, 2025

    Research updates, October 7

  • A scientific drawing shows a blood clot, with red blood cells trapped in a white fibrin mesh.
    September 30, 2025

    Research updates, September 30

  • Photo of an art piece: a white object, shaped like an egg, with painted representations of the virus SARS-CoV-2 across its surface
    September 26, 2025

    Long COVID is not FND, but some patients are getting diagnosed with it. Here’s what to do if it happens to you.

  • Five sheets of Paxlovid pills in an array, with a filter on the image making the sheets appear wobbly
    September 23, 2025

    Research updates, September 23

  • An image of the globe from space, showing the northern portion of South America, Central America, and southern North America
    September 16, 2025

    Research updates, September 16

  • September 12, 2025

    Stop looking for a silver bullet. Start mixing the Long COVID cocktail.

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Covid-19

  • Map of the U.S. by state, with states color-coded according to their recent COVID-19 trends. 28 states are colored in dark red for "growing" and 13 are in bright orange for "likely growing." 8 are in gray for "not changing" and two are in yellow for "not estimated." The map is titled, "COVID-19 trends by state, July 29." Data are sourced from the CDC's Center for Forecasting and Outbreak Analytics.
    August 5, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, August 5

  • Line chart titled, "Regional SARS-CoV-2 Wastewater Concentrations." The chart includes lines representing the four main U.S. regions: purple for Midwest, pink for South, yellow for Northeast, green for West. The X axis represents time, going from March 2024 to July 2025, and the Y axis represents SARS-CoV-2 concentration, copies per mL. All four regions experienced COVID-19 waves in summer 2024 and winter 2024-25, though magnitude differed somewhat (with lower spread in the winter in the West and South compared to the Midwest and Northeast). In the most recent data, all four regions are reporting increases, with the highest levels in the West.
    July 29, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, July 29

  • Line chart showing COVID-19 test positivity between summer 2023 and 2025. The chart is titled, "COVID-19 Nucleic Acid Amplification Test (NAAT) Percent Positivity, by Week, in The United States, Reported to CDC." The X axis represents time, from May 2023 to July 2025, and the Y axis represents weekly % test positivity for COVID-19 tests reported in a CDC lab network. The chart shows COVID-19 waves in summer 2023, winter 2023-24, summer 2024, and winter 2024-25. The most recent data shows a significant increase between June 28 and July 12, 2025, though the line is dashed to indicate that recent data are preliminary and subject to change.
    July 22, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, July 22

  • Map of the U.S. by state, with states colored according to their wastewater viral activity levels for SARS-CoV-2. The chart is titled, "COVID-19 wastewater viral activity levels, July 5," and additional text below the title reads: "Wastewater viral activity levels of SARS-CoV-2 for U.S. states, for the week between June 29 and July 5, 2025. Note that the CDC's activity levels are based on already-high baselines." Four states are colored in dark red for "high" levels: Florida, Alabama, Alaska, Hawaii. Five states are colored in orange for "moderate" levels: California, Nevada, Colorado, Louisiana, South Carolina. Most other states are colored in yellow for "low" levels or light green for "very low" levels. North Dakota is colored in gray for "no data."
    July 15, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, July 15

  • alt text: Map of the U.S., with states color-coded according to whether COVID-19 cases are growing or declining based on CDC forecasts. Text above the map reads: "As of July 1, 2025, we estimate that COVID-19 infections are growing or likely growing in 18 states, declining or likely declining in 3 states, and not changing in 23 states." States with "growing" infections, colored in dark purple, are Texas, Oklahoma, Mississippi, and Alaska. 14 other states across the South and West regions have "likely growing" infections, colored in lighter purple. States with "declining or likely declining" infections are colored in green, and the rest of the map is gray for "not changing" or white for "not estimated."
    July 8, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, July 8

  • Bar chart titled, "Published Sequences from NS3, CDC Sequencing Contracts, and Other CDC Sequencing Efforts: Weekly Published Sequences." The X axis represents time, from January 2021 to May 2025, while the Y axis represents SARS-CoV-2 sequences published each week. The number of sequences published increased and decreased along with COVID-19 spread from 2021 through 2023 but generally stated over 10,000 per week, peaking near 100,000 in early 2022. Since mid-2023, the number of sequences published has declined dramatically, typically staying under 2,000 a week in 2025. The bars are color-coded, with dark blue representing sequences published by the CDC itself and light blue representing sequences published by public health laboratories (PHLs) and partners.
    July 1, 2025

    National COVID-19 trends, July 1

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Health

  • An image of hospitals and clinical teaching facilities at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, with a sepia-toned filter. On top of the image, there's a cartoonish, red drawing of a face showing distress, with X's for eyes and a tongue sticking out.
    June 24, 2025

    UNC shuts down Long COVID clinic, leaving thousands without specialized care

  • A portrait of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., colored in red, with a graphical representation of the SARS-CoV-2 virus behind him.
    June 19, 2025

    The federal government is restricting COVID-19 vaccine access. Here’s what that means for the ongoing pandemic and people with Long COVID.

  • A person sits cross-legged on a city sidewalk, huddled in a winter coat. They hold a cardboard sign that reads: "COVID sucks, hard and lonely times, thank you." There is a white bucket sitting in front of them, reading: "Anything helps, thank you, God bless."
    June 17, 2025

    Long COVID is increasing housing insecurity, but support programs fail to help

  • Graphic showing a stained glass window, with light streaming through in shades of red, orange, pink, brown, blue, and other colors. There is a red shape of a cross at the center of the window.
    June 6, 2025

    Churches are ignoring the Long COVID crisis. Some say it’s at odds with Christian values.

  • A group of advocates standing in front of Los Angeles City Hall, an imposing white building with palm trees out front. Everyone in the group is wearing high-quality masks, and advocates toward the front hold a banner with the words, "Lie Down 4 Long Covid."
    June 2, 2025

    Los Angeles’ $13M COVID-19 relief funds could go to building upgrades, not Long COVID care

  • Graphic showing a red cross with a large crack running through its center, against a backdrop with small white coronavirus particles on an orange background
    June 2, 2025

    Emergency departments aren’t trained for Long COVID — and patients are paying the price

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Commentary

  • A purple background features a photo of Cochrane editor-in-chief Dr. Karla Soares-Weiser wearing a turtleneck and wool blazer. To her left, a screenshot of the controversial 2019 review called "Exercise therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome." On top of the review is a stamped black text box with white alphanumeric symbols indicating swear words.
    February 4, 2025

    “Really pissed off”: Cochrane receives backlash from advocates and experts after abandoning ME/CFS review

  • 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

  • At the front, a row of protestors in wheelchairs display signs in support of Palestinian liberation. Essay author Jenna Bitar is second from left. Comrades are supporting the wheelchair users, and other members of the march are visible behind them, as well as businesses and homes of Bay Ridge, Brooklyn.
    January 17, 2025

    Instead of supporting people with Long COVID, our government funds a genocide

  • A section of the AIDS quilt, featuring tributes to people who died of the disease. Each one is a colorful rectangle with the person's name, details about their life, and graphics. The section for activist Ryan White is black with green letters and a white candle.
    January 14, 2025

    Immune system damage from COVID-19 is different from HIV/AIDS — but the advocacy has parallels

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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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