'Today the Danish CDC announced:
* 30% ppl who caught covid have long covid 6-12 after
* 60% of Danes had omicron
18% of 🇩🇰 will have long covid 6+ months later w/those numbers.
Grim. For Danes, Denmark, and anyone following their trajectory.'
https://twitter.com/...808551698587651
'The study includes one of the largest groups yet of people who were not hospitalised with COVID, and followed them for longer than other major studies, the researchers from Denmark's State Serum Institute (SSI) said.
The questionnaire-based study suggested that the most commonly reported long-term symptoms were changes in sense of smell and taste, as well as fatigue.
[...] 29.6% of the respondents who had tested positive reported at least one ongoing physical symptom 6 to 12 months after infection, compared to 13% in the control group.
[...] Just over half (53.1%) of those with positive tests said they had experienced either mental or physical exhaustion, sleep problems or cognitive problems within the 6 to 12 months after infection. That compared to 11.5% in the control group.
[...] "It's something you should take into account when you are weighing up the risks and benefits of... the interventions you are making, and vaccinations,"
[...]
"If Omicron is causing long Covid at the same rate as these earlier variants, we could be looking at a major crisis over the next 12 months given the number of people who have been exposed to this virus,"
'
Almost a third of people report lingering symptom 6-12 months after COVID-19 -study | Reuters
For those whose symptoms are limited to change in sense of smell / taste, that doesn't seem all so bad (unless you're a professional food critic, or live to eat---or smell...). But fatigue... and brain fog....
SSI skønner, at 59% af de voksne danskere har været smittet med covid-19 siden november
'Covid pandemic sparks steep rise in number of people in UK with long-term illness
Figures have soared by 1.2m in two years of pandemic as long Covid takes its toll
More than a third of working-age people in the UK now suffer from a long-term illness[...]
"These figures show the ongoing shock waves of the past two years continue to affect lives today. We're concerned things will continue to get worse as time goes on.[...]"
"It feels like we're ignoring long Covid, [...] People in the middle of their lives are getting robbed of their livelihoods, at risk of losing their homes. I can't fathom why we don't try to prevent it. But we're not."
[...] "We don't yet have data on how many infected during the huge Omicron wave will go on to experience prolonged symptoms, so [numbers] will almost certainly grow. Many, if not most of those with long Covid, are of working age and were previously fit and healthy – there is surely going to be a major effect on the workforce."'
Covid pandemic sparks steep rise in number of people in UK with long-term illness | Health | The Guardian