Long COVID ties heart disease for health outcomes. Vaccines reduce risk: study

By Serina DeSalvio, St. Louis Post-Dispatch

ST. LOUIS — Long COVID is on par with heart disease in terms of its severity, but vaccination reduces risks of long COVID by nearly 70%, say researchers at Washington University.

In a recent study, researchers found that the risk of contracting long COVID has decreased since the start of the pandemic. With each new variant of the virus, the risk has gone down — and if you’re vaccinated, the risk has been even smaller over time — but it still isn’t zero.

“You may have forgotten about your COVID infection, but it hasn’t forgotten about you,” said Dr. Ziyad Al-Aly, a clinical epidemiologist at Washington University and senior author on the study.

The U.S. is experiencing an upswing in COVID cases in most states. Updated vaccinations are important for protecting the public from illness, especially chronic disease that can require a lifetime of symptom management, Al-Aly said.

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