Health & Fitness

Rutgers Researching ‘Long COVID’ In Kids, Adults; Participants Needed

The university is heading a four-year National Institutes of Health study that will enroll 2,000 children and young adults to age 25.

NEW JERSEY — Rutgers University is heading a four-year National Institutes of Health study into “long COVID,” a term used to describe lingering COVID-19 symptoms, and is seeking participants to help conduct research.

Rutgers will take the lead in a National Institutes of Health study that aims to take a look into long COVID in children, including its evolution and how often it occurs. The university is recruiting 150 participants and will lead a national network of 14 sites that will recruit an additional 2,000 participants. The total NIH national recruitment goal is 20,000 participants.

Here’s what to expect, Rutgers administrators said:

Find out what's happening in Newarkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“In the study’s first phase, participants will provide blood and saliva samples and complete an at-home questionnaire. Qualifying participants will continue to the second phase, which involves an in-depth evaluation that will include bloodwork, an electrocardiogram and lung-function testing at the Pediatric Clinical Research Center at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick. Some participants may be selected for even more in-depth study, including brain imaging, cognitive testing and echocardiograms.”

For more information or to register for the study, fill out a survey online here.

According to Rutgers researchers, children and adolescents are particularly susceptible to long-term COVID-19 symptoms, including brain fog, loss of stamina, pain, headaches, fatigue, anxiety, depression, fever, cough and sleep problems.

Find out what's happening in Newarkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“We need to think about long COVID as the onset of a new chronic disease of childhood,” said Lawrence Kleinman, the lead investigator for the Collaborative Long-term study of Outcomes of COVID-19 in Kids (CLOCK) consortium at Rutgers and a professor and Vice Chair for Academic Development in the Department of Pediatrics at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School.

“Impacts may be readily apparent and observable, latent in a way that emerges later or only apparent at times of emotional or physical stress,” Kleinman said. “Beyond that, we need to think of the direct effects of COVID-19 on the child’s body, the impact of family members getting sick or dying on the children’s life and the indirect impacts of the various experiences of the pandemic independent of individual infections.”

“We need to learn how to incorporate an appreciation of the life course — the journey from conception through adulthood — both in our understanding of the impacts of acute and long COVID and on how to develop intervention to mitigate deleterious effects on children and families,” Kleinman said.

The study is part of a $30 million grant Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School received as part of the NIH-funded Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery (RECOVER) initiative to lead a national collaboration to study long-term and delayed impacts of COVID-19 in children.

Send news tips and correction requests to eric.kiefer@patch.com. Learn more about advertising on Patch here. Find out how to post announcements or events to your local Patch site. Don’t forget to visit the Patch Newark Facebook page.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.