The Guardian (USA)

Study finds link between poor mental health and long Covid

- Ian Sample Science editor

People who are highly stressed, anxious, lonely or depressed before catching coronaviru­s are more prone to long Covid than those in good mental health, according to a major study.

A Harvard analysis of health data from nearly 55,000 US volunteers, most of whom were women, found that high levels of psychologi­cal distress before Covid infection raised the risk of longterm illness by 32%-46%.

The results highlight the urgent need to support people with mental health conditions and the importance of building mental health resilience more widely in the population to reduce the impact of long Covid.

“Depression, stress and loneliness are very, very common, and the fact that they increase the risk of long Covid a fair amount is notable,” said Andrea Roberts, a senior research scientist at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health. “The associatio­ns were stronger with these risk factors than with other things we know to be associated with long Covid, such as obesity, hypertensi­on and asthma.”

A sizeable minority of people who catch Covid develop long-term, often debilitati­ng ailments such as fatigue, breathless­ness, brain fog and heart problems. About one in six middle-aged people and one in 13 younger adults in the UK have symptoms that persist for more than three months. There are thought to be multiple causes, ranging from abnormal immune responses to damaged tissue and residual virus lurking in the body.

While the relationsh­ip between mental wellbeing and long Covid is unclear, psychologi­cal distress can drive chronic inflammati­on and disrupt the immune system, potentiall­y making people more vulnerable to long Covid, the researcher­s note in JAMA Psychiatry.

The Harvard team used questionna­ires to rank the mental wellbeing of 54,960 US volunteers drawn from the Nurses’ Health Studies and the Growing Up Today study. Most of the volunteers were white female nurses aged 40 to 70. In April 2020, none had tested positive for Covid, but over the following year more than 3,000 caught the virus and recorded their symptoms.

Those who scored higher on depression, stress, anxiety, loneliness and worry before catching Covid were more likely to report symptoms lasting more than one month. Such ongoing symptoms were 49% more likely in people with two or more forms of psychologi­cal distress compared with those who reported none. A similar finding was seen in people whose symptoms lasted at least two months.

All Covid symptoms apart from a cough and problems with smell or taste were more common in those who were distressed before they caught the virus. Depending on the type of distress, volunteers were 15% to 51% more likely to say long Covid impaired their daily lives compared with those with no mental health issues before testing positive.

The findings do not mean that mental health issues cause long Covid: more than 40% of those who developed long Covid in the study had no signs of distress before infection.

Mental health is known to affect some diseases. Stress has been linked to a greater susceptibi­lity to common colds and other respirator­y tract infections. Last year, researcher­s in London reported that poor pre-pandemic mental health raised the risk of long Covid, as did being older, female, overweight, in poor general health, and having asthma. A separate study of people with multiple sclerosis found that those with anxiety or depression took longer to recover from Covid.

Siwen Wang, an epidemiolo­gist at Harvard and first author on the study, said it was important for people in poor mental health to have good access to high-quality care. “Future research should investigat­e whether better management of psychologi­cal distress can prevent people from getting long Covid or improve their symptoms,” she said.

Claire Steves, a professor in ageing and health at King’s College London, who was part of a team that found a link between mental health and long Covid last year, said the Harvard study emphasised the need to build support for vulnerable people and to improve mental resilience in the population at large. “It’s important to state that this associatio­n does not mean that prior mental health issues cause long Covid, rather that mental health issues increase the vulnerabil­ity of individual­s, due to decreased reserve so that physiologi­cal changes manifest in daily life.”

Adrian James, the president of the Royal College of Psychiatri­sts, said: “People with severe mental illness are at higher risk of developing a range of physical health problems, including long Covid. We are still learning about the impact of the virus on people’s physical and mental health but we know that long Covid can cause debilitati­ng symptoms. People with long Covid must be able to access the healthcare they need, including appropriat­e specialist mental health provision.

“It’s also vital that research on the impacts of long Covid in people with pre-existing mental illness continues, if we are to ensure the best standard of care for patients down the line.”

 ?? Photograph: Tom Grill/Getty Images/Tetra images RF ?? A sizeable minority of people who catch Covid develop long-term ailments such as fatigue, breathless­ness, brain fog and heart problems.
Photograph: Tom Grill/Getty Images/Tetra images RF A sizeable minority of people who catch Covid develop long-term ailments such as fatigue, breathless­ness, brain fog and heart problems.

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