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People Who Are Vaccinated and Get COVID-19 Are Half as Likely to Have Long-Term Symptoms

Written by George Citroner on September 3, 2021Fact checked by Maria Gifford
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People wait in line for a COVID-19 vaccine. Wang Ying/Xinhua via Getty Images
  • A new study finds that vaccinated people who get a breakthrough case of COVID-19 have a 49 percent lower risk of developing long-haul COVID-19.
  • Symptoms of long-haul COVID-19 can last weeks to months or even longer. They include brain fog, fatigue, persistent loss of smell or taste, hair loss, and numbness.
  • Some people who had mild cases of COVID-19 still end up with symptoms of long-haul COVID-19. This new study finds breakthrough cases are less likely to lead to long-haul COVID-19.

COVID-19 can cause severe illness, sometimes leading to hospitalization and death. But even for people who had mild symptoms, some people have been left with long-term symptoms, now called long-haul COVID-19, or “long COVID.”

“Long COVID is the syndrome of persistent symptoms that develops after the virus that causes COVID has been cleared,” Thomas Gut, DO, associate chair of medicine and director of the Post-COVID Recovery Center at Staten Island University Hospital in New York, told Healthline.

Gut said symptoms can last weeks to months and include brain fog, fatigue, persistent loss of smell or taste, hair loss, and numbness.

With the rise of vaccinations, health experts have been trying to determine whether people who get breakthrough infections would be at the same risk of developing long-haul COVID-19 as unvaccinated people.

A new studyTrusted Source published in the journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases on Sept. 1 finds vaccination not only reduces the risk of infection and severe symptoms, but significantly cuts the odds of experiencing long-term effects if you’re one of the few who experience a breakthrough infection.

Researchers analyzed data from more than 1.2 million adults in the United Kingdom who participated in the national COVID Symptom Study.

They evaluated reports from people who had been given at least one dose of Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, or AstraZeneca mRNA COVID-19 vaccine between December 2020 and July 2021.

Researchers included a control group of unvaccinated people for comparison.

According to the findings of 971,504 fully vaccinated people, only 0.2 percent went on to develop a breakthrough infection.

When this data was compared with reports from unvaccinated people who got COVID-19, it was found that breakthrough cases were associated with a 49 percent lower risk of symptoms lasting 4 weeks or more after infection.

“Recent reports suggest that some individuals remain with ongoing symptoms for at least a year after the infection,” said Dr. David Hirschwerk, an infectious disease specialist at Northwell Health in Manhasset, New York. “Some, of course, will have resolution earlier.”

According to the study, frailty was significantly associated with breakthrough infection in older adults after their first vaccine dose.

Two possible reasons researchers gave for this finding are that adults with frailty are often in long-term care facilities, where there’s increased risk of contracting respiratory illness, and that they have weakened immune systems due to older age.

“This increased risk might therefore reflect increased exposure: unlike non-frail older adults, frail older adults might require carer visits or attendance at health-care facilities,” the study authors wrote.

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“It remains relatively uncommon,” Hirschwerk said. “But we are experiencing an uptick in breakthrough cases compared to several months ago.”

He confirmed that the Delta variant has drastically reduced vaccine effectiveness.

“The vaccines remain about 65 percent effective at preventing symptomatic COVID-19 infection — but previous estimates were around 90 percent,” he said.

According to Hirschwerk, the increase in breakthrough infections is likely a combination of the more infectious Delta variant, some degree of waning immunity in people vaccinated over 6 months ago, and diminished community mitigation to prevent transmission.

He emphasized that “we’re seeing an overall increased prevalence of COVID-19 right now,” which means there’s more exposure to the coronavirus for everyone.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)Trusted Source, COVID-19 vaccines, like all other vaccines, are not 100 percent effective at preventing infections.

However, the CDC points out that:

  • Fully vaccinated people with a breakthrough infection are less likely to develop serious illness than those who are unvaccinated and get COVID-19.
  • Even when fully vaccinated people develop symptoms, they tend to be less severe symptoms than experienced by unvaccinated people, reducing the risk of hospitalization or death.

Hirschwerk said it’s important for every eligible person to get vaccinated.

“There are so many important reasons,” he said. “But emerging data supports that vaccination can also reduce the likelihood of individuals developing long COVID if they develop breakthrough infection, compared to becoming infected while not vaccinated.”

Gut, who specializes in treating people with long-haul COVID-19, agrees that the best strategy to reduce the risk of all COVID-19 complications, “including long COVID syndrome and death,” remains vaccination.

Long-haul COVID-19 affects a significant number of people who recover from the disease. New research finds that vaccinated people who get a breakthrough infection have a 49 percent lower risk of developing long-term symptoms.

Experts say fully vaccinated people with a breakthrough infection are also less likely to develop serious illness or be hospitalized.

They also say that while there’s currently no treatment for long-haul COVID-19, vaccination is a prevention strategy for everyone.

Written by George Citroner on September 3, 2021Fact checked by Maria Gifford

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Health News

Long-Haul COVID-19 Symptoms May Appear in This Order

Written by Bob Curley on March 17, 2021Fact checked by Michael Crescione
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Many people report waves of symptoms after having COVID-19. Al Seib/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images
  • COVID-19 long-haulers may experience symptoms such as fatigue, body aches, shortness of breath, difficulty concentrating, headache, and loss of taste or smell.
  • A new poll finds that there may be a specific order for long-term COVID-19 symptoms.
  • The first symptoms to emerge are often flu-like: fatigue, headache, fever, and chills.

All data and statistics are based on publicly available data at the time of publication. Some information may be out of date.

For some people, COVID-19, no matter its severity, is a one-and-done event, with symptoms clearing up within 2 to 6 weeks of infection with the coronavirus.

For others, the initial illness can be just the beginning of an extended period of complications, sometimes even for people who were only mildly ill due to the infection.

Such symptoms may come in waves, cropping up at regular intervals, newly compiled data suggests.

COVID-19 long-haulers may experience symptoms such as fatigue, body aches, shortness of breath, difficulty concentrating, headache, loss of taste or smell, or other problems long after the coronavirus has left the body, according to the World Health OrganizationTrusted Source.

Research suggests that 50 to 80 percent of people who recover from COVID-19 experience at least some lingering after-effects 3 months after infection with the coronavirus.

Prolonged symptom duration and disability are common in adults hospitalized with a severe form of COVID-19.

Patient interviews show that while 65 percent of people who had been released from the hospital after being treated for a severe form of COVID-19 had returned to full health, 35 percent still had not fully recovered more than 2 weeks after being hospitalized.

Fatigue, cough, and headache were the most commonly reported problems, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)Trusted Source reported.

British researchers estimatedTrusted Source that among all COVID-19 survivors, hospitalized or not, about 10 percent experience long-term health problems.

Now, new and preliminary research focusing on nonhospitalized people in California found that 27 percent reported persistent symptoms after 60 days.

Women were also more likely to report symptoms. They accounted for 72 percent of COVID-19 long-haulers.

Of those with long-term symptoms, nearly one-third had been asymptomatic at the time they tested positive for the coronavirus.

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A separate patient survey conducted by Dr. Natalie Lambert, one of the researchers involved in the California study, found that long-haul COVID-19 symptoms may manifest at regular intervals — often a week to 10 days apart.

The survey of 5,163 patients with COVID-19, conducted via the Survivor Corps patient-advocacy website for those with long-haul COVID-19, found that the first symptoms to emerge are flu-like: fatigue, headache, fever, and chills.

About 5 days later, diarrhea, nausea, and vomiting ensue for some patients.

At 10 days post-infection, body pain and neurological problems like confusion, dizziness, and difficulty concentrating tend to arise, according to self-reports from patients with COVID-19.

High or low blood pressure, heart palpitations, and lightheadedness were reportedly more frequent 15 days after initial illness.

COVID-19-related symptoms like mouth sores, twitchy muscles, eye infections, and skin conditions may not appear until 21 days later, or 3 weeks after the initial infection with the coronavirus, the survey suggested.

Diana Berrent, a COVID-19 survivor and founder of Survivor Corps, told Healthline that individual reports from the group’s 150,000-plus members support Lambert’s survey findings.

“Some people are chronically sick from day one. For others, you think you feel better and then you’re hit by another wave and another wave,” she said. The latter phenomenon, known as recrudescence, also may affect people who had mild or even asymptomatic cases of COVID-19, Berrent added.

Dr. Peter Staats, medical advisor to Survivor Corps, said the waxing and waning of COVID-19 symptoms among “long COVID” patients could be the result of organ or blood vessel damage caused by infection with the coronavirus. Or it could be a form of persistent inflammation due to an immune overreaction or virus lingering in the body — something that’s already known to happen with the virus that causes both chickenpox and shingles.

“The good news for people who are experiencing symptoms in waves is that the waves do seem to get milder over time, at least anecdotally,” said Berrent. Some reports from group members also seem to suggest that COVID-19 vaccination may also ease recrudescent symptoms, she said.

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Written by Bob Curley on March 17, 2021Fact checked by Michael Crescione

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