In a recent interview with Jacaranda FM, Professor Helen Rees, executive director of Wits Reproductive Health and HIV Institute (Wits RHI), said many people were now experiencing long Covid symptoms and according to her, the Covid-19 vaccines’ benefits outweigh any risks.
Wits’ RHI is Wits University’s largest research Institute with a mandate for multi-disciplinary research, health systems strengthening and capacity building, focusing on HIV-TB, vaccine preventable diseases and reproductive health.
As researchers are still learning new things about Covid-19 daily, there are many aspects of the virus that are not fully understood. That includes the so-called long Covid.
Where some people may recover completely from Covid-19 within three weeks, others experience symptoms for months after the initial infection and some may even test negative while still not feeling ready to return to work.
According to a brief published by the World Health Organization (WHO) regarding the long-term effects of Covid, being a Covid-19 long hauler “can be severely disabling, and those suffering from it report functional disabilities. Although there is no simple symptom or test for diagnosing it, many people experience severe fatigue and a range of troubling physical symptoms that make it difficult for those who are employed to return to work. This has obvious economic consequences”.
According to the US’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), even people who did not have Covid-19 symptoms in the days or weeks after they were infected can have post-Covid-19 conditions.
Long Covid can also be referred to as long-haul Covid, post-acute Covid-19, long-term effects of Covid, or chronic Covid.
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Although research is still being conducted on the topic, it has been found that people suffering from asthma are more likely to develop long-Covid.
According to research done by King’s College London, having two doses of the Covid-19 vaccine reduces the risk of developing long-Covid in adults who become infected by 50%.
Professor Rees says: “There is now evidence that shows that if you have a vaccine, you are much less likely to get long Covid.”
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