Bit more analysis on that:Transcript of a speech given by someone from the Bank of England a week or two ago included this section on the increase of people in the UK not looking for a job due to long-term sickness (my bolding).
The route back to 2% inflation − speech by Michael Saunders
"The workforce has shrunk by 440,000 people (1.3%) since Q4-19, and is 2.5% below the January 2020 forecast (see figure 5). The scale and persistence of this drop in labour supply has been a surprise to many forecasters, including us. The interplay between Brexit and the pandemic has reduced net inward migration (and hence population growth), while participation has fallen markedly (especially among people aged 50-64 years). Since Q4-19, the number of people aged 16-64 years that are outside the workforce and do not want a job has risen by 525,000 (1.3% of the 16-64 age population). This largely reflects increases in long-term sickness (roughly 320,000 people) and retirement (90,000), with smaller contributions from lower participation among students (65-70,000) and short-term sickness (30-35,000 people). The share of the 16-64 population who are outside the workforce and do not want a job because of long-term sickness is a record high, with an especially sharp rise among women (see figure 6). I suspect much of this rise in inactivity due to long-term sickness reflects side effects of the pandemic, for example Long Covidfootnote[3] and the rise in NHS waiting lists."
https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/spe...ers-speech-at-the-resolution-foundation-event
Bank of England officials also warned MPs about this reduction in the workforce yesterday.
Edit: Reporter apologized
But in many seniors, long covid is difficult to recognize.
“The challenge is that nonspecific symptoms such as fatigue, weakness, pain, confusion, and increased frailty are things we often see in seriously ill older adults. Or people may think, ‘That’s just part of aging,’” said Dr. Charles Thomas Alexander Semelka, a postdoctoral fellow in geriatric medicine at Wake Forest University.
Over the next year, working with his colleague Dr Chloe Park, Hughes will analyse 800 people from those studies — comparing those with and without long Covid and without infection entirely. Separately, more than 30,000 people in the studies will have their records analysed and checked against antibody tests. The study has already found that risk of long Covid is associated with being female, overweight and mental health problems. It, like the virus, is stratified, affecting 1.2 per cent of 20-year-olds but 4.8 per cent of 60-year-olds. As to the ultimate prognosis — for patients, long Covid and the country — that will only come with time.
I had to laugh at that. Typical. I'm not going to bother frankly, I'm done with hoping it won't be massively disappointing, it always is. I don't have the energy to tell them every wrong thing they'll do, will leave this to LC whipper-snappers.Québec ME/CFS patients deserve access to new long-Covid clinics, advocates say.
The network of clinics will focus on long COVID and Lyme disease, but not myalgic encephalomyelitis, leaving patients with the complex illness feeling forgotten again.
https://montrealgazette.com/news/lo...ccess-to-new-long-covid-clinics-advocates-say
Like we're still at day 1. Nothing learned at all that we didn't know for a long time. Hell, like we're still in the 1980's.What We Know About Long Covid So Far--NYT
Not a very good article
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/21/...73MoH-c2TlazTLJskKo6WlEdzUpeMk&smid=url-share
Long Covid? Don’t fall for quick-fix ‘cures’! Private clinics are marketing a range of therapies including supplements to help tackle the condition
Blood cleaning, brain-stimulating massages, electromagnetic energy zaps, vitamin cocktails or even having your cells’ energy ‘boosted’.
These are just some of the costly ‘treatments’ being touted by clinics in the UK and abroad that promise to treat long Covid.
Latest figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show that 1.7 million people in the UK report having long Covid — defined as symptoms such as fatigue, shortness of breath and brain fog that last for at least two months.
Around half say their symptoms have lasted for a year or more.
In response, private clinics are marketing a range of therapies to tackle long Covid.
However, experts say these have no scientifically accepted proof of effectiveness (even the NHS’s long Covid services are providing unproven therapies).
Yet several private UK clinics are offering intravenous drip treatments with cocktails of supplements said to help with recovery.
For instance, the private London Clinic of Nutrition, is marketing an ‘intravenous (IV) nutrient therapy’ for long Covid, as well as ‘high-quality supplements’ and ‘bespoke herbal formulas’.
Dr David Strain, a senior clinical lecturer at Exeter University Medical School, is also working to find new ways to diagnose and treat long Covid.
He warns: ‘These private clinics have popped up because at the moment no one knows what the proper treatment is. But if you see a clinic that offers to cure your long Covid, then they are lying.’
‘No one can offer a cure for long Covid because we don’t even know what long Covid is doing to people yet — let alone how we can fix it.’
Which brings us to the question: what is the NHS offering? The UK has more than 80 specialist NHS long Covid clinics that take referrals from GPs and are staffed with doctors, physiotherapists, occupational therapists and mental health professionals.
And while much of what they offer (such as physiotherapy) may have been proven for other conditions, none has been the subject of a major trial for long Covid.