November 22, 2024

The only daily news program focused exclusively on technology, innovation and the future of business from San Francisco.
Simulcast of Bloomberg Television
When the world was confronted with the pandemic in 2020, Australia responded hard and fast in what would be, at first, one of the most successful efforts to combat the virus.
New Zealand’s Weak Retail Sales Raise Technical Recession Risk
These Are China’s 19 New Measures to Bolster Economic Growth
Apple Confirms Sept. 7 Launch Date for iPhone 14, New Watches
SoftBank-Backed Agri Startup Turns Unicorn With $2.7 Billion Tag
Singapore’s Genesis Targets $150 Million for Startup Debt Fund
Indonesian Senior Cop Quits as Public Anger Mounts Over Scandal
US Strikes Back at Militants in Syria After Rocket Assaults
Billionaires Rubenstein, Leonsis Eyeing MLB’s Nationals and Orioles
Do You Qualify for Student Debt Relief? What Borrowers Should Know About Biden’s Plan
Our First Steps? Fossil May Boost Case for Earliest Ancestor
Jerry Allison, Drummer for Buddy Holly, Dead At 82
US-South Korea War Games Have a Global Audience
Pakistan Can’t Afford Another Political Crisis
Good Luck Taking Away China’s Manufacturing Mojo
The Future of Shipping Is … Sails?
Truth Social Has a Content Moderation Problem
Good Luck Finding a Seat in That Fancy Airport Lounge
Singapore Housing Barrier Becomes Even Higher for LGBTQ Buyers
Biden Wins Emergency Abortion Access Ruling in Idaho
Harvey Weinstein Is Granted Appeal of Rape, Sex-Assault Conviction
US Crop Tour Stokes Fears of Looming Corn Shortage
Australia Could Power the World and Its Green Ambitions Could Change Everything
Former NYC Mayor Bill De Blasio Gets 477 Votes in a Race He Quit
White House Pledges ‘Stability’ Vouchers for Homeless and At-Risk People
Cities Funding Abortion Access Battle State Leaders Against It
Alameda Co-CEO Trabucco Steps Down From Crypto Trading Firm
Ethereum ‘Bug Bounties’ Jump to $1 Million Before Software Upgrade
Voyager Gets Bankruptcy Court Approval on $1.6 Million in Key Employee Bonuses
Hunter Reinard and Lincoln Brockmeyer 
As the world pretends the pandemic is over, at least a half-million children in the U.S. are struggling with the mysterious disease.

Lincoln Brockmeyer folds his lanky 6-foot-4-inch frame onto the examination table as he explains to the pair of doctors that he feels tapped out, his energy totally sapped. Some days, he says, he needs a nap to make it through the afternoon. Worse than the bone-tired feeling he can’t seem to shake is the constant pain in his legs and the sensation that each one weighs a thousand pounds. He tells the doctors that he’s lost weight—at one point he was down 30 pounds, to 148. He can’t run without getting lightheaded, he says, and every time he stands up he gets deep purple spidery veins on his arms and legs. He loves playing basketball, but not when his body hurts like this.
“I’m trying to stay optimistic,” he says when the doctors inform him he’s got all the signs of long Covid. They’re telling him this in March, and if he wants to get better he needs to take it easy. That means no basketball for a while. Lincoln hates hearing this. Still, they start hatching a plan—something none of the other doctors he’s seen have been able to offer. It’s too late for what would have been his freshman season of high school, but they’re hopeful he’ll be back on the court in time for his sophomore year. “We’ve got you,” says Amy Edwards, a pediatric infectious diseases expert who runs the long-haul Covid clinic at University Hospitals Rainbow Babies & Children’s hospital in Cleveland.

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