For these findings, the researchers again used data from more than one million people who consented to participate in 23andMe’s COVID-19 Study. By examining the differences in the genome between COVID-19 cases who did and did not experience loss of taste or smell, our scientists identified an association on chromosome 4 near the olfactory genes UGT2A1 and UGT2A2 (Figure 1 and Figure 2a).The study is in preprint, and the genetic variant they found only makes one "about [sic] 11.5 percent more likely to lose their sense of smell or taste if infected". They also share some interesting data about anosmia by age: younger people are more likely to experience it, even controlling for general loss of smell among the elderly.
Massachusetts cases were up a fiftieth of a percentage point yesterday.
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