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A health worker performs a physiotherapy treatment on a COVID-19-infected patient at the intensive care unit of Anhembi emergency makeshift hospital in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on July 1, 2020. - The Red Cross decried Wednesday the politicisation of the pandemic in many countries, warning that the "divisive" response by leaders in places like Brazil and the United States was taking a heavy toll. The South-American country counts nearly 60,000 deaths from more than 1.4 million cases. (Photo by Miguel SCHINCARIOL / AFP)
A health worker performs a physiotherapy treatment on a COVID-19-infected patient at the intensive care unit of Anhembi emergency makeshift hospital in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on July 1, 2020. - The Red Cross decried Wednesday the politicisation of the pandemic in many countries, warning that the "divisive" response by leaders in places like Brazil and the United States was taking a heavy toll. The South-American country counts nearly 60,000 deaths from more than 1.4 million cases. (Photo by Miguel SCHINCARIOL / AFP)
/ MIGUEL SCHINCARIOL
Por Agencia EFE

La cantidad de anticuerpos que generan quienes han pasado el COVID-19 aumenta cuando se sufren otras patologías, como problemas respiratorios, digestivos o cardíacos, según un estudio de la Universidad de Medicina de Graz, en Austria, publicado hoy.

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