Dec. 15, 2022 тАУ More than 3,500 Americans died from long COVID during the first years of the pandemic, a new CDC report reveals. Men, people over 75, and American Indian/Alaska Native populations were at the highest risk of dying.┬а
The CDC study is тАЬcertainly very sobering,тАЭ says William Schaffner, MD, a professor of medicine in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Vanderbilt University School of┬аMedicine in Nashville.
The new information shows that long COVID is more serious than many people previously considered, he says.┬атАЬWe know that long┬аCOVID is┬аvery common, and it’s causing a lot of grief┬аfor┬аa lot of patients. Fortunately,┬аover time, many of these patients improve.тАЭ
However, тАЬnow we see from the CDC report that, actually, some people are going┬аto die,тАЭ says Schaffner, who is also medical director of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases.┬а
Researchers at the CDC’s Center for Health Statistics looked at death certificates that mentioned long COVID (or chronic COVID, long haul COVID, post COVID syndrome, and others) as a cause of death or a contributing factor. They matched these certificates to medical records with a code related to COVID-19.┬а
They identified 3,544 Americans who died from long COVID from Jan. 1, 2020, through June 30, 2022. This group is a fraction of the 1.02 million people who died from COVID-19 during that time. Their findings are published in the December 2022┬аCDC Vital Statistics Rapid Release report.
тАЬI think the study’s fascinating and interesting. It brings perspective to the consequences of COVID even after we’ve finished focusing on the acute infection itself,тАЭ says Thomas Gut, DO, associate chair of medicine and medical director of the Post-COVID Recovery Center at Staten Island University Hospital in New York City.
ItтАЩs still early days, he says. тАЬThis is just the tip of the iceberg тАж for the consequences that we’re going to be facing long term.тАЭ
Regarding the 3,500 deaths, тАЬI think it’s a low number overall,тАЭ Gut says. тАЬThere’s probably a lot more people that have died. We probably missed a lot of long COVID early on, not realizing that’s what it was.тАЭ
ItтАЩs unlikely death certificates earlier in the pandemic would include the acute COVID infection as a cause of death 3 to 6 months later, for example, Gut says. Going forward, this could change. Long COVID is a chronic condition, so itтАЩs more likely to be listed listed on a death certificate.┬а
Some at Higher Risk
More than half of the deaths linked to long COVID, 57%, occurred in people ages 75 and older. Also,┬аmen accounted for 51.5% of long COVID deaths.
Furthermore, 79% of long COVID deaths were non-Hispanic white people, followed by 10% non-Hispanic Black people and about 8% Hispanic people.┬а
Even though non-Hispanic American Indian/Alaska Native people experienced less than 2% of all the long COVID deaths in the study, they emerged as a high-risk group in a separate analysis. Their age-adjusted death rate for long COVID was highest, at 14.8 deaths per 1 million people. In contrast, non-Hispanic Asian people had the lowest age-adjusted death rate, at 1.5 per 1 million.
Minority groups like American Indians and Alaska Natives тАЬhave been disproportionately affected by the virus┬аfrom the beginning of the pandemic тАУ and have been also among the harder to reach and to provide access to the vaccine,тАЭ Schaffner says.
This report shows that efforts to reach these underserved communities continues to be essential, he says. тАЬWe need to keep doing that тАУ and if we needed another reason to do that, here it is.тАЭ
The CDC researchers propose a bleak reason why higher death rates from long COVID were not found among non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic people in the study, despite these groups having higher COVID-19 mortality rates: Many COVID-19 patients in these groups likely died of their original disease before they could develop long COVID.┬а
Some Study Limitations
Although the medical community continues to learn and acknowledge the burden of long COVID and health care professionals have been using the term more, there is lots of variability, since we still do not a have a unified diagnosis of this illness .┬а
тАЬThe fact that the number of long COVID labeled deaths has been increasing over time could be a result of more awareness among the medical community, and┬аtherefore make it very challenging to draw specific conclusions from this study,тАЭ says Fidaa Shaib,┬аMD, an associate professor of medicine in the section of pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine, and director of the┬аPost COVID Care Clinic┬аat Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.┬а
Even though the study found more deaths among men,┬атАЬour experience and the experience of others have shown that PASC [post-acute sequelae of COVID] or long COVID patients are predominantly middle-aged women.тАЭ
Shaib points out some limitations of the study. Some causes of long COVID deaths could be from other disorders тАУ like heart disease тАУ that increase the risk of death from acute COVID-19 itself.┬аAlso, the data did not include information about the length of time from the original COVID-19 illness to the time of death. тАЬTherefore, the PASC/long COVID diagnosis might not be very accurate.тАЭ
тАЬOverall, this study is a good start to draw more attention about the seriousness of acute and long COVID illnesses,тАЭ Shaib says, тАЬbut more specific data is needed.тАЭ
Keeping тАШthe Pedal on the MetalтАЩ
Avoiding COVID-19 in the first place remains the best protection against long COVID, Schaffner says. Like many public health officials, he emphasized the importance of staying up to date on COVID vaccinations as the most effective strategy.┬а
тАЬAs a population, the United States has┬аreally not taken sufficient advantage of the freely available тАУ and really quite effective тАУ boosters that are out there now.тАЭ The latest CDC estimates report that┬а13.5% of Americans 5 years and older have received an updated booster dose.┬а
For this reason, тАЬwe need to really to keep the pedal on the metal, trying to get the message out,тАЭ Schaffner says.
тАЬIn this holiday season, the best gift you can give yourself and to the members of your family, your loved ones, and friends is to get the booster┬атАУ┬аand bring some of them along when you get the vaccine so that they can get the booster also.тАЭ