5/6/25: Spinal surgery for rare ME/Long COVID complication; still COVIDing without support

In this episode of Still Here: Science journalist Colleen de Bellefonds discusses a spinal surgery that can help reduce symptoms for some people who have a rare complication of myalgic encephalomyelitis — and, increasingly, Long COVID. And writer and COVID resource archivist Nadica Zimmerman shares experiences from people still practicing COVID safety in the midst of a lack of community support. Also in this episode: A preprint of a study in which researchers from University of California, San Francisco, and the National Institutes of Health found that COVID-19 may increase the long-term risk of cancer.The transcript for this podcast is⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ available on The Sick Times’ website⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. You can jump to specific sections of the podcast and transcript below:(00:00:00) ⁠Intro⁠(00:02:15) This surgery fuses people's skulls to their spines to treat a condition overlapping with myalgic encephalomyelitis(00:12:45) Missives from the dismissed: Still COVIDing without community(00:25:59) ⁠Research: UCSF preprint about COVID-19 and cancer risk(00:28:34) ⁠Outro⁠-Mentioned in this episode (in order of appearance):The Sick Times: This surgery fuses people's skulls to their spines to treat a condition overlapping with myalgic encephalomyelitisThe Sick Times: Missives from the dismissed: Still COVIDing without communityThe Sick Times: Research updates, April 22Additional audio in this episode: Rude Mechanical Orchestra: Which Side Are You On? (orig. Florence Reece) 

Om Podcasten

Every week, co-hosts Miles Griffis and Betsy Ladyzhets talk with podcast producer James Salanga about the latest COVID-19 numbers, and Long COVID news, commentary, and research. No pandemic minimizing, gaslighting, or denial here! Still Here is an abridged version of The Sick Times’ newsletter, which publishes weekly. The Sick Times is a nonprofit newsroom chronicling the ongoing Long COVID crisis.