Events2Join

With Coronavirus in Mind


With Coronavirus in Mind, Are You Ready for Remote Work? - Gartner

many coronavirus contingency plans require remote work. Seize the opportunity to bolster your policies — and prepare for future workplace and employee needs.

Does COVID-19 damage the brain? - Harvard Health

Most people who get COVID-19 don't suffer damage to the brain. But some do, and even people who initially get just mild COVID symptoms are ...

COVID-19 and your mental health - Mayo Clinic

They can lessen everyday stress or significant anxiety linked to events such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Self-care actions give your body and mind ...

COVID-19 and the Nervous System

Brain fog. People with COVID-19 may experience new or increased difficulty concentrating, processing information, and remembering things. This is sometimes ...

The COVID Mind Study at Yale < Neurology

The COVID Mind Study is dedicated toward bettering our understanding of COVID-19's effects on the brain. Our work spans multiple disciplines - including.

COVID-19 Can Leave a Lasting Mark on the Brain—Especially for ...

Studies suggest that COVID-19 is associated with possibly long-lasting changes to the brain, potentially contributing to cognitive problems like ...

Beyond breathing: How COVID-19 affects your heart, brain and ...

The coronavirus is capable of causing much more than a simple respiratory illness, affecting organs throughout the body, experts say.

Coronavirus and mental health - Mind

The coronavirus pandemic impacted all of us, in many ways. For some of us, this included affecting our mental and physical health – and we may still feel ...

Study sheds new light on severe COVID's long-term brain impacts

Many patients have worse cognitive function than those who weren't hospitalized, a symptom that comes with reduced brain volume and brain injury markers on ...

COVID-19 related cognitive, structural and functional brain changes ...

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has been associated with brain functional, structural, and cognitive changes that persist months after ...

Serious COVID-19 Cases Can Age the Brain Substantially for a Year ...

COVID-19 patients show substantial cognitive decline 12-18 months after hospitalization , But they may be able to recover, ...

How Does Coronavirus Affect the Brain? | Johns Hopkins Medicine

The third theory is that all of the physiological changes induced in the body by COVID-19 — ranging from high fevers to low oxygen levels to ...

Long COVID Brain Fog: What It Is and How to Manage It

Brain fog is considered a Long COVID symptom if it's present three months after the person had COVID and has persisted for more than two months, ...

Research suggests COVID-19 affects brain age and IQ score

A study of people with mild to moderate COVID-19 showed significant prolonged inflammation of the brain and changes that are commensurate with ...

Did the Pandemic Break Our Brains? | TIME

The SARS-CoV-2 virus can affect the brain directly, as many studies have now shown. But the pandemic may have also affected cognition in less-obvious ways.

COVID-19 and its impact on the brain and Mind- A conceptual model ...

COVID-19 is associated with an increased prevalence of anxiety, stress, poor sleep quality, obsessive-compulsive symptoms, and depression among the general ...

COVID-19 on mind: Daily worry about the coronavirus is linked to ...

Despite a surge of studies on the effects of COVID-19 on our well-being, we know little about how the pandemic is reflected in people's spontaneous thoughts ...

Mind Over Matter: Strategies to Help Combat the Coronavirus Blues

Welcome to the Mind Over Matter, Strategies to Combat the Coronavirus Blues Resource. Guide! What is this? A catalog of links to information and graphics ...

Five tricks your mind might play on you during the COVID-19 crisis

Dr Christopher Graham, a Senior Lecturer in Queen's School of Psychology, talks about our natural human responses in this crisis, and suggests positive ways to ...

What is COVID-19 brain fog — and how can you clear it?

Brain fog is not a medical or scientific term; it is used by individuals to describe how they feel when their thinking is sluggish, fuzzy, and not sharp.