In November 2020, Congress allocated $1.5B to NIH to find out why some people with Covid-19 didn’t recover, and to develop treatments for those suffering with Long Covid. Two and one-half years later, there’s almost nothing to show for those billions of dollars, according to an April report in
STAT, an award-winning health, science, and public health online journal. (1)
“The National Institutes of Health [NIH] hasn’t signed up a single patient to test any potential treatments—despite a clear mandate from Congress to study them,” Rachel Cohrs and Betsy Ladyzhets reported in
STAT. “And the few trials it is planning have already drawn a firestorm of criticism, especially one intervention that experts and advocates say may actually make some patients’ Long Covid symptoms worse.” (1)
Despite disappearing the $1.5B Congress allocated for the Long Covid program, named RECOVER, NIH hasn’t requested more funding to study this syndrome that’s estimated to affect millions of Americans. According to a joint investigation by
STAT and nonprofit organization
MuckRock, NIH is refusing to use any of its own money to speed up research or change course.
In this investigation,
STAT and
MuckRock interviewed two dozen government officials, experts, patients, and advocates, as well as examining public documents plus internal NIH correspondence. Nevertheless, it’s hard to tell how this situation evolved, since “the NIH has obscured both who is in charge of the Long Covid efforts and how it spent the money,” according to Cohrs and Ladyzhets.
The Congressional mandate was simple: increase understanding of why some people develop Long Covid while others don’t, and test potential treatments. It’s obvious that no breakthroughs have been made in understanding Long Covid since the study started in February 2021 and, according to
STAT, “as of April, RECOVER hasn’t signed up a single patient for any of those clinical trials. And the timeline has slipped over and over again.” (1)
Initially, in a letter to members of Congress prompted by
STAT’s March
2022 reporting on the initiative’s slow start, the NIH told lawmakers that
the agency expected to launch clinical trials by that fall. But by August, the
estimated launch had slipped to “by the end of 2022.” Then, another delay
became public in December, when one of the NIH officials leading RECOVER
told advisers that clinical trials would begin by the first quarter of 2023. Now,
Duke University, which is overseeing the clinical trial infrastructure, told
STAT
and
MuckRock it expects the first patients to sign up for trials this summer
[2023]. (1)
As for following the money, “There is no single NIH official responsible for leading RECOVER, and the initiative has failed to share basic information that would typically be available for a government research project of this scale,” according to Cohrs and Ladyzhets. Instead of directly funding clinical trials, NIH has outsourced them to five research institutions—New York University, Mayo Clinic, Massachusetts General Hospital, Duke University and RTI International (an “independent nonprofit research institute dedicated to improving the human condition”)—and those organizations have funded the trials, not NIH, according to the
STAT and
MuckRock investigation. Therefore, public databases don’t show how the funding is being spent, and more than one inquiry about it has been rebuffed by government officials. (1)
“The NIH RECOVER study is pointless,” said Jenn Cole, a Long Covid patient in Brooklyn. She tried to enroll but found the process “inaccessible.” It’s “a waste of time and resources,” she told Cohrs and Ladyzhets. (1)
In one of the protocols, NIH planned to test how Long Covid patients respond to exercise. Cohrs and Ladyzhets included a discussion of how damaging exercise is to both ME/CFS and Long Covid patients—so why don’t NIH researchers know about this well-documented phenomenon? (1)
You can probably imagine how this story ends, and the entire report of
STAT and
MuckRack’s
investigation is well worth reading.
Meanwhile, at approximately the same time the NIH-led Long Covid disaster-in-the-making became public, the National Institute of Neurologic Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) announced a “funding opportunity” from NIH titled “Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) Collaborative Research Centers (CRCs).” (2)