Independently, advocates, researchers, and clinicians also reported seeing an increase in the number of people who have developed long COVID after a second or third infection.

John Baratta, MD, who runs the COVID Recovery Clinic at the University of North Carolina, said the increase is related to a higher rate of acute cases in the fall and winter of 2023.

In January, the percentage of North Carolinians reporting ever having had long COVD jumped from 12.5% to 20.2% in January and fell to 16.8% in February.

At the same time, many cases are either undetected or unreported by people who tested positive for COVID-19 at home or are not aware they have had it.

Hannah Davis, a member of the Patient-Led Research Collaborative, also linked the increase in long COVID to the wave of new infections at the end of 2023 and the start of 2024.

"It's absolutely real," she said via email. "There have been many new cases in the past few months, and we see those new folks in our communities as well."

After there was a lull in cases last spring/summer, a lot of covid minimizers claimed long covid isn't a big deal anymore because there were less new cases. Immunity wall or whatever. Turns out cases start increasing again when there is a major covid wave. No one could have forseen...

The best we can say is that some people who get long covid will feel better within a year, and all current data points to covid having cumulative risk. Everytime you get covid, your risk of long term symptoms goes up.

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  • JoeByeThen [he/him, they/them]
    hexbear
    20
    edit-2
    2 months ago

    Regarding that first tweet image.

    Someone here pointed a few months back that all these excess deaths are on top of the fact that we let like a million of our most vulnerable members of the population die; Something that should have put us into negative excess morbidity for quite some years. doomer

    Also, I feel like '800 new deaths a month forever' is still pretty optimistic given things are still early, and looking at the second image, as people rack up infections, the increase in morbidity is sure to follow.

  • macabrett[they/them]@lemmy.ml
    hexbear
    9
    2 months ago

    At some point, society is going to have to reckon with this.

    I just don't know how or when it will happen. We haven't even had any sort of national mourning for the millions that have died. Kind of impossible to hold a national mourning when the number is still steadily increasing.

    Think about it, this fucking country mourned 9/11 for decades. That was 3,000 people. This is millions. It's as if 9/11 happened and then we discovered "if 3000 people gather in one building, it's a dice roll on whether it also gets 9/11'd" and instead of addressing it, we just pretended it wasn't happening all around us all the time. We kept building buildings that could hold 3000 people. We kept forcing people into workplaces with more than 3000 people and they kept getting 9/11'd. It's insanity.

    • sovietknuckles [they/them]
      hexbear
      7
      2 months ago

      Think about it, this fucking country mourned 9/11 for decades. That was 3,000 people. This is millions.

      Both mourning 9/11 and ignoring COVID deaths and long COVID have been good for short-term economic gains