Maybe this needs its own thread but... uh... not worth it. Same old predictable tripe. Also: pre-print.
Post-COVID-19 Symptom Burden: What is Long-COVID and How Should We Manage It?
https://www.researchsquare.com/article/rs-164000/v1
Abstract:
The enduring impact of COVID-19 on patients has been examined in recent studies, leading to the description of Long-COVID. We report the lasting symptom burden of COVID-19 patients from the first wave of the pandemic. All patients with COVID-19 pneumonia discharged from a large teaching hospital trust were offered follow-up. We assessed symptom burden at follow-up using a standardised data collection technique during virtual outpatient clinic appointments. Eighty-six percent of patients reported at least one residual symptom at follow-up. No patients had persistent radiographic abnormalities. The presence of symptoms at follow-up was not associated with the severity of the acute COVID-19 illness. Females were significantly more likely to report residual symptoms including anxiety (p=0.001), fatigue (p=0.004), and myalgia (p=0.022). The presence of long-lasting symptoms is common in COVID-19 patients. We suggest that the phenomenon of Long-COVID may not be directly attributable to the effect of SARS-CoV-2, and believe the biopsychosocial effects of COVID-19 may play a greater role in its aetiology.
Discussion:
We suggest the impact of a new, poorly understood, and lethal virus and the associated societal disruption it has caused must not be understated.
...
With the paucity of evidence available, we question whether Long-COVID exists as a new disease with distinct pathophysiology. We suggest it is a new manifestation of a well-recognised phenomenon that can be observed after other traumatic events, as opposed to the persistent effect of COVID-19.
...
Data from the COVID symptom study App identified self-reported fatigue as the commonest complaint in a large group of Long-COVID patients [8]. If these symptoms were persistent at 4 months, they would meet the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) diagnostic criteria for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS). A CFS diagnosis is considered when patients report post-exertional fatigue, cognitive difficulties, sleep disturbance, and chronic pain [16]. This is a remarkably similar symptom complex that we and others have observed in Long COVID. There are also marked epidemiological similarities. Female preponderance is well described in the CFS literature [17] and obesity is also associated with greater symptom burden [18].
Conclusions:
We report data consistent with current evidence on the prevalence of post-COVID-19 symptom burden. We demonstrate an absence of association between symptom burden and radiographic or biochemical abnormality. We suggest that the phenomenon of Long-COVID may not be directly attributable to the effect of SARS-CoV-2, but rather the neuropsychiatric insults may play a greater role in its aetiology. Our observations help to inform decisions on service design and priorities for the care of these patients.
At least they are honest that all it is a belief. But it is kind of telling how they admit that when they mean "biopsychosocial effects" they 100% mean psychiatric, or something like that. It's largely argued here because... women be hysterical. As best as I can tell from the ramblings. And not enough coughing? Honestly I can't make sense of this tripe. This is a position paper, not serious research. It's an NHS trust promoting its belief system.
Edit: just marveling at the argument here: we checked known things and didn't find anything, therefore this is not an unknown thing. It ages like fine wine. Same stuff as Wessely, who did the same thing. True galactic genius.