KEY POINTS
  • The U.S. government is rolling out a massive study of long Covid in an effort to understand the mysterious condition.
  • The study, Recover, aims to complete enrollment of nearly 40,000 people by year-end.
  • The National Institutes of Health also plans to launch clinical trials on potential treatments in coming months.
  • However, critics say the study's rollout is moving too slowly.
  • Scientists, physicians and public health officials are worried millions of Americans may have long-term health complications from Covid-19.
A healthcare worker administers a Covid-19 test at testing site in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Monday, Jan. 10, 2022.

The National Institutes of Health is rolling out one of the largest studies in the world to understand long Covid in a high-stakes effort to find definitive answers about a multitude of seemingly unrelated and sometimes debilitating symptoms that have plagued patients and confounded physicians.

The $1.15 billion taxpayer-funded study, called Recover, aims to enroll nearly 40,000 people by the end of this year. It will follow those participants over four years, comparing people with Covid to those who've never had it, with the goal of identifying all the long-term symptoms and finding out how the virus is causing them. The Patient-Led Research Collaborative said there were more than 200 long Covid symptoms across 10 organ systems, according to a study published last year in The Lancet.