RECOVER • PARTICIPATE • SUPPORT RESEARCH
Your involvement, participation and support of ongoing Medical, Scientific & Academic research is urgently needed.
Since the start of the COVID pandemic, over 181 million cases of COVID-19 have been experienced globally, with over 33.5 million cases in the United States alone. While cases are declining in the US, individual healing, our national recovery and the overall global pandemic are far from over.
Scientists and physicians seek to better understand the disease through research and patient surveys. Physicians and health care providers are working to develop improved diagnostics and treatments to aid in the recovery of those with persistent Long COVID symptoms. Pharmaceutical companies continue to produce new therapeutics aimed at recovery and prevention. And, policy makers seek to memorialize what worked and what did not over the past 18 months through National COVID commissions and analysis.
You can help by enrolling in scientific studies, clinical trials and completing surveys and polls. Your participation will advance science, helping doctors and researchers develop insights into COVID-19 that will aid in local, national and global recovery. The COVID conversation must remain in the public eye. If you are willing to share your story with the public and the media, send us an email with details.
Click on the boxes to learn more about participating in research, how/where to donate blood and plasma for those in need, and for our library of FAQs.
Your unique COVID-19 experience can provide the information and data that will inform policy decisions, improve medical practices and contribute to the science and research.
Survivor Corps has partnered with leading research institutions to develop the following studies:
Long Hauler Symptom Studies: Dr. Natalie Lambert, Lambert Health Lab
(Indiana University School of Medicine)Recovery Corps: To better understand how individuals recover from COVID
(Columbia University)Yale Long COVID Vaccine Study: How vaccines might improve Long Covid symptoms
(Yale University)
#StrongerTogether - We can beat this!