Thursday, February 17, 2022
Covid survivors are up to 40% more likely to go on to suffer depression and anxiety or misuse drugs
The government response to your getting covid would depress anyone -- isolation etc
Covid survivors are at increased risk of suffering depression, sleep problems and drug misuse, a major US study has found.
A growing body of research has linked beating the virus to health problems months down the line such as fatigue and brain fog.
But now a study of 150,000 people has linked the infection with much more severe mental health problems.
Researchers found Covid survivors were 40 per cent more likely to be depressed or struggle sleeping, and 20 per cent more likely to abuse substances within a year of catching Covid.
They also had a slightly higher risk of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), suicidal thoughts and panic attacks.
And the more severe their infection was, the more likely they were to report a mental health issue, which suggests Covid may be playing a role.
The paper — published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) — was observational and could not establish a cause.
But depression and anxiety are already linked to 'long Covid', an umbrella term that covers a range of ailments people experience after an infection.
Evidence is already mounting that Covid damages blood vessels, including ones in the brain, which could explain the lingering symptoms.
Researchers from St Louis University looked at 150,000 military veterans who were mostly male, in their 60s and tested positive up to January 2021. Participants were tracked for a year.
They were compared to a group of 5.6million veterans who had not caught the virus by this date.
There were roughly 15 extra cases of depression per 1,000 people among the Covid survivors group.
Suicidal thoughts were around 46 per cent more common among those who caught the virus, with about two extra cases per 1,000 people.
They were also more likely to suffer sleeping problems, with 24 extra cases per 1,000 people.
Scientists found higher rates of alcohol and drug misuse among Covid survivors as well, at four and two extra cases per 1,000 respectively.
While the study was observational, researchers pointed to previous studies showing Covid infections — particularly severe bouts — can reduce blood flow to the brain and damage neurons to explain their findings.
Why are Covid survivors more likely to have mental health problems?
Research from early in the pandemic suggested that those who caught Covid were more likely to suffer mental health problems.
But scientists have not been able to say why this is the case.
Anxiety rates were higher during the early days because of the virus as lockdowns were imposed and restrictions introduced.
Scientists say catching Covid may have led to further raised stress because it was a new disease.
They added that the stress of lockdowns was likely adding to the pressure.
But being forced off work, isolated from family and unable to exercise while suffering from the disease were also thought to play a role.
Of those in the study who caught Covid, 20,996 (14 per cent) were admitted to hospital with severe disease.
Hospitalised Covid patients were 243 per cent more likely to suffer a mental health problem, at a rate of 177 extra cases per 1,000 people.
But those who did not have a severe infection were still 40 per cent more likely to suffer mentally, or 31 extra cases per 1,000.
Overall, scientists said people who caught Covid were 60 per cent more likely to have a mental health disorder or prescription than those who did not catch Covid.
Participants in the most recent study were recruited from the US Department of Veterans Affairs national healthcare database.
Most were men (89 per cent), and classified as obese (45 per cent) or overweight (35 per cent).
Weight is one of the biggest risk factors for Covid, with those who are obese being three times more likely to die from the disease studies suggest.
Previous research has linked surviving Covid with mental health problems.
One paper from Oxford University published in April last year found one in three survivors were diagnosed with depression, anxiety or other issues within six months of beating the virus.
And a separate paper from Milan University found more than half of the most severely ill patients later developed psychiatric problems — including PTSD.
Dr Max Taquet, a psychiatrist at Oxford University who was not involved in the study, said: 'This is a well-conducted study which confirms the findings from several previous studies showing that after Covid infection, patients are at an increased risk of developing mental health disorders.
'While the data is limited to US Veterans, other studies representative of the larger population have found similar findings.
'The fact that patients appear to still be at an increased risk 12 months after their Covid diagnosis is concerning, but whether this represents delayed diagnoses or new onset of mental illness remains to be determined.'
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Danish health chiefs dismiss doom-mongering claims that Covid deaths and hospitalisations are soaring since country became first to ditch its final virus restrictions
Danish health chiefs have taken to social media to debunk doom-mongering claims that Covid hospitalisation and death rates are both soaring after dropping nearly all of its virus curbs.
Experts at the Statens Serum Institut (SSI), the Government agency responsible for pandemic preparedness, are publicly dismissing misinformation about the state of the Scandinavian nation's outbreak.
Daily Covid cases and hospitalisations have reached record highs in February, while deaths are nearly level with previous peaks and trending upwards.
But the agency has now hit back at backlash and insisted that soaring tolls are being driven by 'incidental' cases — mirroring a trend seen in the UK.
Denmark became the first country in Europe to lift all domestic Covid restrictions at the start of the month, ending rules on face coverings, vaccine passports and work from home guidance. Only self-isolation rules remain.
Critics of the move, which England is set to follow next week, argue it is dangerous because it increases the risk of a more severe variant emerging.
Dr Eric Feigl-Ding, an epidemiologist at the Federation of American Scientists (FAS), accused the Danish Government of 'losing their frigging minds' by releasing Covid restrictions.
And Dr Eric Topol, a cardiologist at US research centre Scripts Research, warned the country's Covid outbreak is 'not looking good', highlighting that daily deaths are at '67 per cent' of the previous peak and have a 'steep ascent'.
WHAT IS THE COVID SITUATION IN DENMARK?
On February 1, Denmark became the first country in Europe to lift all Covid curbs, ending rules on face coverings, vaccine passports and work from home guidance.
Following the move, daily Covid cases and hospitalisations have reached record highs in February, while deaths are nearly level with previous peaks and trending upwards.
Nearly 60,000 infections, 451 hospitalisations and 38 deaths were recorded per day at peaks over the last fortnight.
The data has given fuel for scientists to argue that the country's approach isn't working.
But Government scientists argued that incidental virus hospitalisations and deaths are on the rise as society opens up.
The country, which counts virus fatalities as deaths within 30 days of testing positive on a PCR test, saw 5.21 deaths per million people registered yesterday.
This marked the highest daily tally since its peak last winter, according to the Oxford University-backed statistical platform Our World in Data.
But the SSI scientists said this figure includes all deaths among people infected with the virus, rather than those which were caused by the virus.
They said: 'Since Omicron became the dominant variant in Denmark a lot of people get infected.
'An increase in numbers of infected also makes it easier for a person to die a number of days after an infection without having anything to do with the Omicron infection.'
The SSI said this means 'having an increase in number of infected persons will also have an increase in the number of persons' counted as Covid deaths.
For exactly the same reason, the scientists also dismissed claims 'many people are hospitalised' because of Covid.
Official figures show 300,000 people tested positive last week, but just 2,400 were admitted to hospital.
And four in 10 coronavirus admissions are now primarily being treated for another cause, according to Government data.
The SSI said the proportion of Covid patients who are hospitalised because they are unwell with the virus has been falling since July.
The agency also disregarded claims that Denmark has decided Covid 'does not exist anymore' as 'incorrect'.
Covid is still circulating but is not considered 'an infection critical to society', the SSI said.
The dominant Omicron strain is milder than previous variants and 81.5 per cent of the population have received two vaccine doses, which 'largely protects against severe disease', it said.
'Therefore, Covid does not have the same impact on society and the population as earlier in the pandemic,' the scientists said.
This allowed virus curbs to be lifted on February 1 but the 'Danish authorities very much acknowledge the presence of Covid', according to the SSI.
Danish people are still advised to wear face masks and show vaccine passports at hospitals and care homes, while students are advised to test regularly.
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Also see my other blogs. Main ones below:
http://edwatch.blogspot.com (EDUCATION WATCH)
http://antigreen.blogspot.com (GREENIE WATCH)
http://pcwatch.blogspot.com (POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH)
http://australian-politics.blogspot.com/ (AUSTRALIAN POLITICS)
http://snorphty.blogspot.com/ (TONGUE-TIED)
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