China News Service, December 18th. According to a British Sky News website, studies have shown that many patients with COVID-19 will still experience some long-term symptoms, including anxiety, depression, dyspnea, fatigue, etc. even after they are cured and discharged from the hospital.

A London man suffers from these sequelae.

  According to reports, 32-year-old Tom Stayte (Tom Stayte) is an entrepreneur. He was infected with the new crown in March and continued to suffer from various sequelae for the next 9 months.

Data map: In the British intensive care unit, medical staff are taking care of patients.

  Staite said his symptoms include dyspnea, night sweats, muscle cramps, skin rash, swollen blood vessels, slurred speech, difficulty swallowing, neuralgia, abdominal pain, weight loss, cognitive problems, confusion, hallucinations, hallucinations and Auditory hallucinations, numbness and tingling of limbs.

  Staite told Sky News: "There is no day without illness. Sometimes I feel like a prisoner. Looking back, I realize that it is a privilege to wake up every morning to have a healthy body."

  "I thought being young and healthy would protect me. I was wrong. I used to run marathons a lot, but now I can't even practice gentle yoga."

  Stett said: "I'm scared, but doctors and consultants have always insisted that I have anxiety. When doctors cannot explain my symptoms through blood tests or scans, they often deny that I am sick or have trouble with my symptoms. Understatement."

  "I thought I was going crazy. When I finally found an online patient group, I cried, and I realized that I was not alone. We now know that one out of every 10 people infected with the new crown will continue to suffer for a long time. Torture of sequelae."

  Staite said that although his condition has improved since the summer, there is still a long way to go before returning to "normal".

"No one really knows when we will get better or whether we will get better."

  According to the report, according to the National Bureau of Statistics of the United Kingdom, as many as 186,000 Britons have suffered from the sequelae of the new crown for 12 weeks.

Currently, the UK has opened more than 60 clinics to help these patients.