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European Journal of Public Health ; 32, 2022.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-2310855
2.
European journal of public health ; 32(Suppl 3), 2022.
Article in English | EuropePMC | ID: covidwho-2102598

ABSTRACT

Introduction Data on willingness to participate in population-based long-COVID studies are sparse. We invited all citizens of Essen aged 18-74 years with a positive SARS-CoV-2 PCR test between Mar-Aug 2020 and assessed COVID-related symptoms in responders ∼1.5 years after infection. Methods The invited population included 1282 infected citizens (48% women). At the time of testing 64% reported symptoms. We asked responders about past and current symptoms, hospitalization, smoking, sport, pre-existing conditions (heart attack, stroke, diabetes), subjective health status as compared to before infection, assessed BMI, and performed descriptive statistics. Results We investigated 255 participants (50% women, 19-73 years, response rate 20%) ∼20 month (median) after the PCR test. 95% reported symptoms at the time of testing: 67% fatigue, 58% taste disorders, 56% limb pain, 55% odor disorders, 54% headache, 50% cough, 43% fever;10% needed hospitalization, 3% intensive care, 1.6% artificial ventilation. Compared to the non-hospitalized the formerly inpatients were more often male (62% vs 49%), older (56±13 vs 49±14 years), less often never smokers (42% vs 53%), had a higher BMI (31±7 vs 28±5 kg/m2), and more pre-existing conditions (23% vs 10%). Compared to before infection, 53% rated their current health worse, with a higher rate among inpatients (81%). After ∼1.5 years, 55% still reported symptoms: 25% fatigue, 20% concentration disorder, 18% breathing problems, 13% odor and 11% taste disorders. Persistent symptoms were more common in inpatients than in non-hospitalized (69% vs 53%). Conclusions Symptomatic individuals are more likely to participate in a COVID19 follow-up study than asymptomatic ones. This may overestimate the number of individuals with long-term symptoms in population-based long-COVID study populations. However, persistent symptoms seem to be more likely in formerly inpatients compared to non-hospitalized individuals with former SARS-CoV-2 infection. Key messages • Symptomatic individuals are more likely to participate in a COVID19 follow-up study than asymptomatic ones. • Persistent symptoms seem to be more likely in formerly inpatients compared to non-hospitalized individuals with former SARS-CoV-2 infection.

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