Despite testing negative after a COVID-19 illness, some patients still experience the lingering, debilitating symptoms of post-COVID syndrome
The perception that a “recovered” COVID-19 patient’s health returns to how it was before their diagnosis is not the case for many.
A recent study conducted in England (with similar findings resulting from a study at an American university) determined that approximately 10 percent of COVID-19 become “long haulers.”
COVID-19 long haulers are those who tested positive for the coronavirus but continue to experience symptoms associated with COVID-19 even after they’ve tested negative. It’s an ailment being referred to as post-COVID syndrome.
Those with post-COVID syndrome continue to be treated by their physicians in their “recovery.”
The research continued, finding that anyone can become a long hauler – it doesn’t impact a specific demographic more than another. Race, gender, age or health status before a diagnosis play no factor into determining who becomes a long hauler.
There is much more still to be learned about long haulers, but patients can experience symptoms for several weeks or even months after testing negative. A physician at the Mayo Clinic has said that it may take a year or more for long haulers to fully recover.
Post-COVID syndrome symptoms
Symptoms associated with a COVID-19 long hauler are:
-
Ongoing fatigue
-
Body aches and joint pains
-
Shortness of breath
-
Coughing
-
Headaches and “brain fogginess” (confusion and forgetfulness)
-
Loss of taste and smell
-
Trouble sleeping
What you can do now
Following the guidelines set by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to help slow the spread of COVID-19 will also slow the occurrence of post-COVID syndrome.
-
Wear a mask
-
Socially distance
-
Avoid large crowds
-
Encourage those around you to do the same
Safe care at McLaren
Learn more about how McLaren is providing care in a safe and clean environment..
Click here