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Long COVID risk lower from Omicron, study finds

The risk of long COVID is lower after Omicron but only for the double-jabbed, the study found.

The risk of long COVID is lower after Omicron but only for the double-jabbed, the study found. Photo: Getty

The Omicron variant of coronavirus is less likely to cause long COVID than previous variants, according to the first peer-reviewed study of its kind from Britain.

Researchers at King’s College London, using data from the ZOE COVID Symptom study app, found the odds of developing long COVID after infection were 20 per cent to 50 per cent lower during the Omicron wave in Britain compared with Delta.

The figure varied depending on the patient’s age and the timing of their last vaccination.

Long COVID, which includes prolonged symptoms ranging from fatigue to “brain fog”, can be debilitating and continue for weeks or months.

It is increasingly being recognised as a public health problem, and researchers have been racing to find out if Omicron presents as big a risk of long COVID as previously dominant variants.

The study from King’s is believed to be the first academic research to show Omicron does not present as great a risk of long COVID, but the team said that did not mean long COVID patient numbers were dropping.

While the risk of long COVID was lower during Omicron, more people were infected, so the absolute number now suffering is higher.

“It’s good news, but please don’t decommission any of your long COVID services,” lead researcher Claire Steves told Reuters, appealing to health-service providers.

Britain’s Office for National Statistics said in May that 438,000 people in the country had long COVID after Omicron infection, representing 24 per cent of all long COVID patients.

It also said the risk of lingering symptoms after Omicron was lower than with Delta, but only for double-vaccinated people. It found no statistical difference for those who had three shots.

In the King’s research, 4.5 per cent of the 56,003 people studied during Omicron’s peak, December 2021-March 2022, reported long COVID.

That compared with 10.8 per cent of 41,361 people during the Delta wave in June-November 2021. It did not compare vaccinated and unvaccinated individuals.

While the study – published in The Lancet journal on Thursday – compared Delta and Omicron, Dr Steves said previous work had showed no substantial difference in long COVID risk between other variants.

More work was needed to establish why Omicron may have a lower long COVID risk, the team said.

-AAP

Topics: Britain
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