“Kids, I’m sorry to say this, but it’s a big deal. It hurts,” Eli told CNN’s Chris Cuomo on Monday. “You just had to face the truth: sometimes you’re not well.”
Eli describes being in pain, bored and bored. But as tired as he is and as much as he wants to be, he tells Cuomo that he can’t sleep.
“My body is like ‘no,'” Eli said.
Lippman said doctors initially cleared Eli Lee and his illnesses several times. First in his diagnosis, then when his symptoms persisted and whenever Alley’s temperature remained low-level fever for months.
“Really no one would think we were still sick, and when you don’t believe you stop believing yourself,” Lippman said.
Lipman is still battling symptoms. He said that most mornings he wakes up early with grief when he broke his shoulder, he can’t go up the stairs without panting and he can’t even cook dinner for his family because he gets tired of doing it.
“One of the important things is to talk to your doctor, and doctors need to listen to your patients,” Lee said. “There’s really something going on before our eyes that we need before our eyes that we should really try to help our patients and ourselves to recover as researchers and as doctors.”
Lee recommends that, in addition to regular communication with doctors, long-haired women need to get as much sleep, movement, and leafy greens as possible.
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