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English to Chinese: Blood clotting may be the root cause of Long COVID syndrome, research shows General field: Medical Detailed field: Medical (general)
Source text - English Blood clotting may be the root cause of Long COVID syndrome, research shows
Summary:
New evidence shows that patients with Long COVID syndrome continue to have higher measures of blood clotting, which may help explain their persistent symptoms, such as reduced physical fitness and fatigue.
The study, led by researchers from RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences, is published in the Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis.
Previous work by the same group studied the dangerous clotting observed in patients with severe acute COVID-19. However, far less is known about Long COVID syndrome, where symptoms can last weeks to months after the initial infection has resolved and is estimated to affect millions of people worldwide.
"Because clotting markers were elevated while inflammation markers had returned to normal, our results suggest that the clotting system may be involved in the root cause of Long COVID syndrome," said Dr Helen Fogarty, the study's lead author, ICAT Fellow and PhD student at the Irish Centre for Vascular Biology in the RCSI School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences.
English to Chinese: Are COVID-19 vaccine boosters the way forward? General field: Medical Detailed field: Medical (general)
Source text - English Are COVID-19 vaccine boosters the way forward?
There are growing concerns that COVID-19 vaccines do not offer sufficient protection against new variants of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Israel has already started to offer booster shots of the Pfizer vaccine to at-risk adults, and the United States is in talks with Pfizer about introducing these shots for the most vulnerable.
All data and statistics are based on publicly available data at the time of publication. Some information may be out of date. Visit our coronavirus hub and follow our live updates page for the most recent information on the COVID-19 pandemic.
There is growing evidence that people who have received COVID-19 vaccines are less likely to become infected with the virus that causes this disease and that if they do, they are less likely to have symptoms of severe illness.
However, evidence is also emerging that existing vaccines may offer less protection against new variants of SARS-CoV-2, such as the delta variant.
One studyTrusted Source, for example, showed that 95% of people who received both doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine had a weaker immune response to the delta variant than to previous strains.
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Bio
An interpreter on a mission to spread ideas and knowledge
Xuling started translating since she was 13 years old. Her father is a leading art historian specializing in the study of Buddhist arts in early medieval “Western Regions.” It was practically impossible for him to extract reliable information from poorly translated materials. So, dad and Xuling made a duo – his expertise in art history and her still growing knowledge of English – to uncover the hidden traces of Greco-Roman influence in early Chinese Buddhist paintings. They were on a mission to spread new ideas and knowledge.
In the past 10 plus years, Xuling specialized in seminar interpretation for incoming Chinese executives attending professional training programs in the States. She interpreted over hundreds of seminars held at most renowned universities and corporations such as Harvard, Stanford, Columbia, UC Berkeley, USC, Google, Apple, Cisco, etc. These seminars cover a wide range of subjects, from leadership, finance, behavioral economics, strategy, innovation, laws, exponential technologies, investments, to sustainable energy, medical science, healthcare, architecture, to agriculture and meteorology. Reflecting on those years, she enjoys the opportunity to spark the desire of learning and spread groundbreaking ideas and knowledge with the most brilliant minds. She was inspired and on a mission.
COVID19 is perhaps the most disrupting force we have encountered in the past hundred years. Xuling is seeking new opportunities, new channels, to carry on her mission to spread new ideas and knowledge with her linguistic expertise. She believes all knowledge is interconnected. However, she is currently more interested in the following subjects: medicine, healthcare, exponential technologies, education, sustainability, abundance thinking, arts, and philosophy.
Over the years, Xuling has acquired a few tools under her belt to stand out as an expert interpreter/translator:
Sherlock Holmes’ inductive reasoning – arriving at a deep and accurate understanding of messages in the source language based on the “forensic” evidence of words, syntax, style of writing, context, and other useful background/domain knowledge.
The ability to deliver nuanced translation that sounds natural in the target language.
Public speaking skills to communicate with confidence and clarity while engaging audience attention in seminar interpretation.
Xuling respects her clients and treats them as partners to help them reach their target audience with their ideas, knowledge, and product offering. She looks forward to opportunities of collaborating with mission driven clients.
Xuling grew up in Beijing and is currently living in southern California. She loves coffee and makes her daily grinds manually. She is learning free-style swimming from YouTube videos. She is also an active member in two Toastmasters clubs: Caltech Debate and Virtual Masters, to hone her critical thinking, virtual presentation, and leadership skills.
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