Public Health Reviews (Mar 2022)

Long COVID Through a Public Health Lens: An Umbrella Review

  • Vasileios Nittas,
  • Manqi Gao,
  • Erin A. West,
  • Tala Ballouz,
  • Dominik Menges,
  • Sarah Wulf Hanson,
  • Milo Alan Puhan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/phrs.2022.1604501
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43

Abstract

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Objectives: To synthesize existing evidence on prevalence as well as clinical and socio-economic aspects of Long COVID.Methods: An umbrella review of reviews and a targeted evidence synthesis of their primary studies, including searches in four electronic databases, reference lists of included reviews, as well as related article lists of relevant publications.Results: Synthesis included 23 reviews and 102 primary studies. Prevalence estimates ranged from 7.5% to 41% in non-hospitalized adults, 2.3%–53% in mixed adult samples, 37.6% in hospitalized adults, and 2%–3.5% in primarily non-hospitalized children. Preliminary evidence suggests that female sex, age, comorbidities, the severity of acute disease, and obesity are associated with Long COVID. Almost 50% of primary studies reported some degree of Long COVID-related social and family-life impairment, long absence periods off work, adjusted workloads, and loss of employment.Conclusion: Long COVID will likely have a substantial public health impact. Current evidence is still heterogeneous and incomplete. To fully understand Long COVID, well-designed prospective studies with representative samples will be essential.

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