There have been many reports identifying the loss of sense of smell as one of the primary symptoms of COVID-19. While some experience the loss for days, there are others who experience it for months.
For Chrissi Kelly, it all started with the toothpaste. Next, it was the shampoo, then the bathroom cleaner. As she scuttled around her bathroom one day in 2012, sniffing everything in sight, her ...
A growing number of people who lost their smell during the COVID-19 pandemic and haven't been able to get it back are now turning to "smell therapy." Anosmia, or loss of smell, was first recognized by ...
The recipe kit provider has introduced free limited-edition ‘Flavour Saviour’ kits in partnership with the charity AbScent to help consumers ‘retrain their senses and rediscover the joy of mealtimes’.
Ground-breaking research conducted by research experts with AbScent’s Long Covid online group has recorded for the first time the wider impact of altered sensing on people’s daily lives. The study ...
About 58,000 people in Reading lost their sense of smell during the covid pandemic AbScent said A smell training workshop to help people who lost their sense of smell after getting Covid is being held ...
Over a decade ago, Chrissi Kelly went to bed and woke up with no sense of smell. She had a severe sinus infection, when she ...
‘Between 50 and 60 per cent of people who’ve had Covid have had a problem with their sense of smell,’ says Chrissi Kelly, the founder of Abscent (abscent.org), a charity set up in 2019 to help people ...
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