piece in Washington Post by Julie Reymeher, Jen Brea and Brian Vastag
https://www.washingtonpost.com/heal...rfTML57KY&mc_cid=a292066a60&mc_eid=7dd94a557c
https://www.washingtonpost.com/heal...rfTML57KY&mc_cid=a292066a60&mc_eid=7dd94a557c
It seems that currently long covid is applied to anyone who doesn't recover in the officially approved time - so say a month, any longer and they have 'long covid'. As far as I am aware many people are recovering (at least apparently) within 3 months - so covid, then a post viral period, then recovered, these are probably, hopefully, the bulk of long covid people."A small but growing body of research suggests as many as one in 10 people who get COVID-19 may fall into the long-hauler category".
I don't think that's accurate. That would be a lot of people with long COVID!
I can't access this without subscribing to FT.Financial Times - Long Covid casts a lasting shadow over workers
Me neither now..I can't access this without subscribing to FT.
Financial Times - Long Covid casts a lasting shadow over workers
The median age of those with Long Covid is 45, and women are more likely to be affected.
I’m sceptical.Using her smartwatch and phone apps, she’s tracked her symptoms and created extensive data logs that have helped her rule out things like chronic fatigue syndrome.
I can't access this without subscribing to FT.
(...)
Royal Society Report (23 October 2020)
Long Covid: what is it, and what is needed?
https://royalsociety.org/-/media/policy/projects/set-c/set-c-long-covid.pdf
The diversity of symptoms and their variable and unpredictable course have generated confusion and uncertainty in both the medical profession and the public. Consequently, many patients have had their disabling or alarming symptoms ascribed to anxiety or depression, or simply dismissed. Long Covid bears a strong resemblance to an ill-defined syndrome usually called post-viral fatigue, whose pathogenesis remains obscure and which is thought by some to lack an organic basis.
The pathophysiology of Long Covid, which may differ from that in the acute illness, warrants detailed investigation.
Royal Society Report (23 October 2020)
Long Covid: what is it, and what is needed?
https://royalsociety.org/-/media/policy/projects/set-c/set-c-long-covid.pdf
...In consultation with NHS England and the World Health Organisation, NICE is currently formulating definitions of the syndrome according to the length of persistence of symptoms. While the general term Long Covid is likely to continue in use, it may be helpful to distinguish between two or three categories: for example, COVID for symptoms persisting up to 3 weeks; Ongoing COVID for symptoms lasting between 3 and 12 weeks; and Post-COVID [syndrome] for symptoms persisting longer than 12 weeks.