Book: After Covid: The Health Impacts That Will Last Generations — Jason Gale

Chandelier

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Jason Gale wrote a book about the health impacts of Covid that will be released in march:

After Covid: The Health Impacts That Will Last Generations, published by Johns Hopkins University Press. Copyright © 2026 by Jason Gale.

Bloomberg published a 2200-word excerpt from the book today:
How Covid Quietly Rewires the Brain
Researchers keep discovering more about the long-term neurological effects of SARS-CoV-2.


AI Summary:
The article reports that researchers are uncovering long-term neurological effects of SARS-CoV-2, suggesting Covid-19 can disrupt and potentially damage the brain, not just the lungs.

Early in the pandemic, Avindra Nath of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke investigated unexplained deaths in New York in which victims stopped breathing without lung or heart damage. High-resolution imaging and microscopic examination revealed loss of neurons in brain stem regions that control breathing. Later, recovering patients described episodes in which breathing no longer felt automatic, resembling Ondine’s curse.

As the pandemic progressed, clinics filled with patients whose initial respiratory symptoms had resolved but who experienced persistent fatigue, cognitive slowing, malaise and other symptoms. Many cases overlapped with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), and later studies found a substantial share of long-Covid patients met ME/CFS diagnostic criteria. Damage in the brain stem and surrounding tissue may interfere with thinking, mood and regulation of heart rate, digestion and blood pressure.

Long Covid has risen rapidly in diagnoses and become economically disruptive. A December study estimated up to 400 million people worldwide are living with long-term consequences of infection, and a November analysis put the annual global economic toll at $1 trillion.

Research increasingly links Covid to structural and cognitive changes in the brain. UK Biobank scans showed subtle loss in regions involved in planning and memory, even after mild infections, along with small declines in cognitive scores in community studies. Although risks appear lower after vaccination and milder infections, they have not disappeared.

In a UK human challenge study, healthy young adults infected with the original strain performed slightly worse a year later on memory and decision-making tests—about a six-point IQ difference—despite mild illness and no reported lasting problems. Observational research and large datasets have found higher risks of cognitive impairment and, in older adults, dementia-level decline months or years after infection.

Older adults and those severely ill appear most affected. Blood tests have revealed proteins linked to Alzheimer’s disease, including phosphorylated tau, particularly in patients with persistent neurological symptoms. A study from NYU Langone Health found enlargement and impaired blood flow in a brain structure involved in immune regulation and waste clearance, along with Alzheimer’s-linked blood markers.

While some researchers caution that biomarkers do not guarantee dementia, Nath argues Covid can accelerate neurodegenerative processes already underway in aging populations. Korean researchers reported structural and biochemical changes about a year after mostly mild infections in patients with lingering cognitive problems, including thinner brain regions tied to attention and memory, iron buildup, enlargement of a structure involved in immune regulation and waste clearance, and blood markers of ongoing brain stress and injury. These findings were replicated in a separate group.

The emerging picture is of subtle but widespread cognitive effects that may erode independence and productivity over time. Nath is leading a clinical trial at the NIH treating long Covid as an immune-driven neurological condition, testing whether immunomodulating therapies can reduce lingering inflammation and restore function. The study is expected to conclude later this year.
 
"How Covid Quietly Rewires the Brain"
Bloomberg said:
Before long, clinics were filling with patients who said their fevers and coughs had resolved but they were now experiencing crushing fatigue, cognitive slowing, malaise and swollen lymph nodes. This cluster of symptoms overlapped with myalgic encephalomyelitis, or chronic fatigue syndrome, a poorly understood illness that has long followed viral infections in some patients. Often referred to as ME/CFS, it can be a lifelong, debilitating condition that leaves sufferers unable to work or even to manage basic daily activities. Because ME/CFS itself has long been contested and underdiagnosed, the resemblance also meant many of the recovering Covid patients struggled to be taken seriously or to find effective treatment.

The overlap in symptoms, Nath says, is “not all that surprising because a lot of viral infections have been associated with this syndrome.” Indeed, some later studies of what came to be known as long Covid showed that a substantial share of patients met the diagnostic criteria for ME/CFS.
Bloomberg said:
Almost five years later, long Covid has had one of the fastest rises in diagnoses and become one of the most economically disruptive chronic conditions in modern medicine. A study published in December estimated that as many as 400 million people worldwide are living with long-term consequences of a SARS-CoV-2 infection. Another analysis, released in November, put the annual economic toll of long Covid at $1 trillion, close to 1% of global gross domestic product.

That scale in turn raises a troubling question: whether Covid is not only leaving millions chronically unwell but also accelerating the slow neurological processes that end in dementia—a pattern that has long been observed after some viral infections.
Adapted from After Covid: The Health Impacts That Will Last Generations, published by Johns Hopkins University Press. Copyright © 2026 by Jason Gale.

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