"The findings strengthened calls from
scientists for more expansive care options for long Covid patients.
A study of tens of thousands of
people in Scotland found that one in 20 people who had been sick with Covid
reported not recovering at all, and another four in 10 said they had not fully
recovered from their infections many months later.
The authors of the study, published on Wednesday in the journal Nature
Communications, tried to home in on the long-term risks of Covid by
comparing the frequency of symptoms in people with and without previous Covid
diagnoses.
People with previous symptomatic
Covid infections reported certain persistent symptoms, such as breathlessness,
palpitations and confusion or difficulty
concentrating, at a rate roughly three times as high as uninfected people
in surveys from six to 18 months later, the study found. Those patients also
experienced elevated risks of more than 20 other symptoms relating to the
heart, respiratory health, muscle aches, mental
health and the sensory system.
The findings strengthened calls from
scientists for more expansive care options for long Covid patients in the
United States and elsewhere, while also offering some good news.
The study did not identify greater
risks of long-term problems in people with asymptomatic coronavirus infections.
It also found, in a much more limited subset of participants who had been given
at least one dose of Covid vaccine before their infections, that vaccination
appeared to help reduce if not eliminate the risk of some long Covid symptoms.
People with severe initial Covid
cases were at higher risk of long-term problems, the study found.
“The beauty of this study is they
have a control group, and they can isolate the proportion of symptomatology
that is attributable to Covid infection,” said Dr. Ziyad Al-Aly, chief of
research at the V.A. St. Louis Health Care System and a clinical epidemiologist
at Washington University in St. Louis, who was not involved in the research.
“It also tracks with the broader
idea that long Covid is truly a multisystem disorder,” Dr. Al-Aly said, one
that resides “not only in the brain,
not only in the heart — it’s all of the above.”
Jill Pell, a professor of public
health at the University of Glasgow who led the research, said the findings
reinforced the importance of long Covid patients being offered support that
extends beyond health care and also addresses needs related to jobs, education,
poverty and disability.
“It told us that Covid can appear
differently in different individuals, and it can have more than one impact on
your life,” Dr. Pell said. “Any approach to supporting people has to be,
firstly, personalized and also holistic. The answer doesn’t just lie within the
health care sector.”
Long Covid refers to a constellation
of problems that can plague patients for months or longer after an infection.
Over the last year, researchers have given more attention to understanding the
daunting aftereffects as the number of Covid cases exploded and health systems
learned to better manage the initial stages of an infection.
U.S. government estimates have
indicated that between 7.7 million and 23 million people in the United States
could have long Covid.
Globally, “the condition is
devastating people’s lives and livelihoods,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the
director general of the World Health Organization, wrote in an article on Wednesday for The
Guardian. He called on all countries to devote “immediate and
sustained action equivalent to its scale.”
The authors of the study in Scotland
tracked 33,000 people who had tested positive for the virus starting in April
2020 and 63,000 who had never been diagnosed with Covid. In six-month
intervals, those people were asked about any symptoms they had, including
tiredness, muscle aches, chest pain and neurological
problems, and about any difficulties with daily life.
By comparing the frequency of those
problems with infected and uninfected people, the researchers tried to overcome
a challenge that many other long Covid researchers have confronted: how to
ascribe less specific symptoms to Covid when those problems are also common in
the general population and may be prevalent in the midst of a pandemic.
Several of the most common long
Covid symptoms identified in the study were also reported by one-fifth to
one-third of participants who had never been infected, the study found. But
symptoms were significantly more common in people who had previously had Covid:
Those participants were more likely to report 24 of the 26 symptoms tracked by
the study.
Of those with previous Covid cases, 6 percent said on their
most recent follow-up survey that they had not recovered at all and 42 percent
said that they had only partly recovered.
Dr. Pell said that she was still
studying the trajectory of long Covid symptoms over the months and years since
an infection. But the new study opened a small window onto that question.
In one group of previously infected patients, about 13
percent of people said that their symptoms had improved over time, while about
11 percent said they had deteriorated.
“Some do resolve over time,” Dr.
Al-Aly said, “but also there’s a good number of people who remain symptomatic
with a bunch of manifestations over longer time periods.”
Only a small portion of the study
participants — about 4 percent — had been vaccinated before their infections,
and many of those with only a single dose.
“We’re now really heavily reliant
upon vaccination,” Dr. Pell said, “which does confer some protection, but it’s
not absolute.”
Women, older people and those living
in poorer areas also faced more serious aftereffects from an infection. So,
too, did those with pre-existing health problems, including respiratory disease
and depression.
About nine out of 10 study
participants were white, making it more difficult to determine how and why long
Covid risks may have differed among racial and ethnic groups.
For health systems still working to
recover from recent Covid surges while facing an onslaught of patients with the
flu and other respiratory illnesses, considerably more resources were needed to
treat patients suffering from an earlier coronavirus infection, scientists
said.
“Our systems are not prepared,” Dr.
Al-Aly said.”
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