Why this health official says it's time to stop using 'long COVID'

Queensland's chief health official is pushing for references to 'long COVID' to be scrapped after new research.

A medical face mask dangles from a pair of hands

Dr John Gerrard says 'long COVID' is the same as the lingering effects suffered after other viruses. Source: Getty / Jenny Evans

Key Points
  • Queensland's Chief Health Officer says references to 'long COVID' should be scrapped moving forward.
  • New research has found long-term COVID symptoms are the same as other viral infections.
  • Dr John Gerrard said the term 'long COVID' wrongly implies there's something unique and sinister about it.
References to "long COVID" should be scrapped according to Queensland's Chief Health Officer after new research found long-term symptoms associated with the virus are the same as other viral infections.

Dr John Gerrard said health officials recognise the ongoing effects suffered by people who have had COVID-19 as real but they are not unique to the virus.

include fatigue, post-exertion symptom exacerbation, brain fog, and changes to smell and taste.
A man speaks outside to reporters
Chief Health Officer Dr John Gerrard provides a COVID update in Brisbane, Tuesday, 22 March, 2022. (file) Source: AAP / Jono Searle
Health officials have been investigating the long-term effects of COVID-19 since early in 2022.

Queensland Health compared the recovery from COVID-19 with people with other viral infections.

The health department surveyed 5112 patients over 18 years old, comprising 2399 with COVID-19 and 995 with influenza.

Some 1718 patients with symptoms of a respiratory infection but who had neither COVID-19 nor influenza, were also surveyed.
Gerrard said the patients were diagnosed between the 29th of May and the 25th of June 2022, when the Omicron variant was dominant and more than 90 per cent of Queenslanders had been vaccinated.

Patients were asked in the survey if they still had symptoms, what they were, and how much those symptoms impacted their daily lives.

Gerrard said 16 per cent of respondents reported some ongoing symptoms regardless of whether they had COVID-19, the flu or another respiratory infection.
Only 3.6 per cent reported moderate-to-severe functional impairment in their activities of daily life.

But there was no evidence that COVID-19 positive adults were more likely to have moderate-to-severe limitations a year after the diagnosis than symptomatic adults, who were negative for COVID-19, he said.

Those results were similar when compared with the 995 symptomatic adults who had influenza, the CHO added.

Gerrard said the survey results indicate 94 per cent of people who tested negative to COVID-19 reported moderate-to-severe functional impairment.

"So there was no difference," Gerrard said.
"I believe it's time to stop using the term long COVID - it wrongly implies there is something unique, exceptional and somewhat sinister about longer term symptoms associated with COVID 19 when we know that all viruses can have longer term effects, so we've seen very similar effects from other virus.

"What we're saying is that these symptoms and these long term effects of COVID are real, but that they are the same as what we see with other viruses and to identify COVID as a particularly unique or sinister virus is doing more harm than good."

The research will be presented at at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases in Barcelona, Spain in April.

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3 min read
Published 15 March 2024 8:58pm
Source: AAP



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