"On catching it again the long COVID became more permanent."
Hip's language is problematic. Something that's been around only three years cannot be said to have any permanence whatsoever. Since the beginning the media has been fear-mongering that LC might be permanent.
Your lack of background reading about myalgic encephalomyelitis / chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) does not inspire much confidence in your views on the subject.
Myalgic encephalomyelitis / chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) has been around since the 1950s. The name myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) was coined after the famous Royal Free Hospital outbreak of ME/CFS in London in 1955.
ME/CFS is a well-characterised disease, and every study on long COVID indicates LC is pretty much identical to ME/CFS. (Yes, there are other forms of LC, like LC based on POTS, or LC based on heart or lung damage, but I am referring here to the ME/CFS form of LC).
So given that ME/CFS is often a life-long affliction, the chances are that LC will be long-lasting too.
We also have data from the SARS-CoV-1 pandemic of 2003, where many people developed ME/CFS, and still have that ME/CFS today, 20 years later.
In fact if you read ME/CFS forums, people such as myself were predicting COVID might create lots of new cases of ME/CFS even before the first case of long COVID appeared, based on what happened with the first SARS pandemic of 2003.
The purpose of this spin on LC was to frighten people into taking the vaccines. Such cynical behavior on the part of the healthcare establishment and media. They drove a small group of LC victims into the worst depression to sell the masses on something they don't need.
Our knowledge of treating of LC has always been far outstripped our knowledge of treating mRNA injection injuries. That's another reason it was always a mistake to promote the latter as a means to avoid the former.
Nonsense!
It has been demonstrated that vaccination offers only minor protection from developing long COVID. Different studies have come up with different figures, but if we take an average figure, COVID vaccination only reduces your chances of getting long COVID by about 30%.
So while vaccination is still a good idea, since 30% is better than nothing, it's not the magic pill that will protect you from LC.
Edited by Hip, 18 July 2023 - 03:41 PM.