Three-year outcomes of post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 Analyses from the US Department of Veterans Affairs databases reported residual elevated risk and health burden of long COVID at 3 years in hospitalized individuals after SARS-CoV-2 infection
Risk of death from COVID-19 lessens, but infection still can . . . The study also shows that even people with mild COVID-19 still experienced new health problems related to the infection three years later New findings on long COVID — long-term effects on health experienced by many who have had COVID-19 — present a good-news, bad-news situation, according to a study at Washington University School of
8 trajectories for long COVID — Harvard Gazette Overall, 10 3 percent of patients had long COVID symptoms three months after infection, and 81 percent of these patients continued to experience persistent or intermittent symptoms a year later Female patients and those who had been hospitalized with an acute infection were likelier to develop persistently severe long COVID symptoms
Study Reveals Insights into Long COVID Trajectories in Adults Overall, 10 3% of patients had long COVID symptoms three months after infection, and 81% of these patients continued to experience persistent or intermittent symptoms a year later Female patients and those who had been hospitalized with an acute SARS-CoV-2 infection were more likely to develop persistently severe long COVID symptoms
Long-term cognitive and psychiatric effects of COVID-19 . . . Many people who were hospitalised with COVID-19 continue to have cognitive and psychiatric problems even two to three years post-infection, according to a new study published in Lancet Psychiatry
The Dual Faces of COVID-19: Progress and Peril Three Years Later A study indicates long-term health risks from COVID-19 persist, with a significant ongoing impact on mortality and health, especially for those hospitalized early during infection Risk of death from COVID-19 lessens, but infection still can cause issues 3 years later The study also shows that