Eastern Eye (UK)

Three per cent of UK’s population reported long Covid, data shows

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AN ESTIMATED two million people in the UK, who account for around three per cent of the population, have reported experienci­ng so-called long Covid, official statistics showed last Wednesday (1).

Around 1.4 million of them said they first had Covid-19, or suspected they had the virus, at

least 12 weeks previously, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). It also found 826,000 of them first had coronaviru­s at least a year earlier, while 376,000 said they first had it at least two years previously.

The ONS figures are based on people’s own reports of suffering from long Covid from a representa­tive sample of private households in the four weeks to May 1.

Fatigue is the most common symptom – experience­d by 55 per cent of those with self-reported long Covid – followed by shortness of breath (32 per cent), a cough (23 per cent) and muscle ache (23 per cent).

The biggest proportion were people aged 35 to 69, females, those living in more deprived areas and those working in certain profession­s such as social care, teaching and education or health care, the ONS said.

Those with another activityli­miting health condition or disability were also more prevalent among the long Covid sufferers, it added. The UK, which was one of the worst-impacted countries by the pandemic, has recorded nearly 18.8 million cases, and almost 178,000 deaths from the virus, since it hit more than two years ago.

The ONS assessment found nearly a third of the two million people reporting long-lasting symptoms first had Covid, or suspected they had it, during the Omicron wave which began late last year. Its numbers follow another UK study published in

April showing that only around a quarter of people have completely recovered from Covid a full year after being hospitalis­ed with the disease.

The research, by the National Institute for Health and Care Research involving more than 2,300 people, also found that women were 33 per cent less likely to fully recover than men.

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