Category: Covid-19

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Young adults show more mental health distress during the COVID … – Northwestern Now

December 1, 2023

EVANSTON, Ill. --- Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic almost four years ago, people across the U.S. have reported increased rates of depression and anxiety.

While the mental health crisis has touched the lives of Americans across a broad spectrum, new Northwestern University research has found that young adults aged 18 to 39 dually burdened by the increased economic uncertainty that often accompanies youth did not recover with the rest of the population as the country emerged from the worst of the pandemic.

The study led by Sarah Collier Villaume of the School of Education and Social Policy (SESP) was published today (Nov. 30) in the journal JAMA Network Open. The researchers found persistently high levels of anxiety and depression among younger adults whether looking at groupings of ages 18-29 or ages 18-39, compared to middle adults (aged 40-59).

For years, there has been a pressing conversation about mental health concerns among adolescents, Collier Villaume said. We've been thinking and talking about the challenges confronting teenagers during this contemporary moment. This is a sobering realization to see that some of those same reported stresses of being a young person in the United States extend well into early adulthood. I think that is an important thing for us to reckon with.

The findings are based on data from the U.S. Census Bureaus Household Pulse Survey conducted over 27 months between 2020 and 2022. The researchers analyses restricted the sample to 18-59 so they could compare 18-39 with 40-59. Those surveyed were asked about their experiences during the pandemic.

Analyzing surveys completed by more than 3 million adults 18 to 59, the researchers found younger adults self-reported anxiety and depression were more elevated than older adults after surges in COVID-19 case counts but decreased less following the availability of vaccination against the virus. Additionally, they estimated that approximately one-third of the age gap among individuals with depression and anxiety can be attributed to demographic differences including economic precarity, to which younger adults are disproportionately exposed.

Among many well-documented costs of the pandemic, the mental health crisis stands out as a challenge and opportunity to better understand subsets of the population separated by age, race and economic status and address their varying needs.

Collier Villaume, the first and corresponding author of the study, is a postdoctoral fellow at the E4 Center in SESP. She conducted this study with Emma Adam the Edwina S. Tarry Professor of Human Development and Social Policy. Adam is the head of the Contexts of Adolescent Stress and Thriving Lab at Northwestern and fellow of the Institute for Policy Research.

Initial studies focused on the first few months of the pandemic and its effects on mental well-being, Collier Villaume said. Now that it has been more than three years from the pandemics onset, datasets like the Household Pulse Survey offer an unprecedented opportunity to examine trends in well-being through multiple years of a global pandemic.

The highest levels of pandemic-era anxiety and depression were observed in 2020 and began to decline in early 2021, coinciding with the availability of the COVID-19 vaccination. This decline in depression and anxiety was larger for adults 40 and older, leading to a widening of the gap in anxiety and depression between those in young and middle adulthood.

The findings identified lower household income and rates of home ownership as key differences between those in young and middle adulthood. According to the study, adults aged 18 to 39 years reported lower household incomes 60% the odds of earning $100,000 or more. It is also more likely for a young adult to be living with other people in a shared space, compared to older adults who tend to live in their own home. Better mental well-being is present in middle adulthood primarily for those experiencing relative economic stability. The authors speculate that these differences in economic conditions, among other social stressors, may have contributed to the heightened stress young adults experienced during the pandemic.

This is a wake-up call for policymakers and for everyone who cares about the well-being of young people in the U.S., Collier Villaume said. Individuals whose annual household income is less than $100,000 are potentially more vulnerable to a novel stressor like the COVID-19 pandemic, compared to those who have more economic stability. If we're seeing these higher levels of symptomology in folks who are more economically vulnerable, then our policymakers want to be thinking about how to shore up that stability during a pandemic, climate crises or other stressors.

Interestingly, vaccinations against the virus being readily available to the public had a greater impact on the betterment of middle adults mental health than it did on younger adults. Greater stress relief from vaccination against COVID-19 may help to explain the reduction in anxiety and depression that adults aged 40 years and older experienced beginning in early 2021, noted the study.

For younger adults, perhaps their symptoms were less about infection or illness and more about living through this deeply isolating and turbulent time. Their stress may have something to do with other acute stressors during this period, including the war in Ukraine, all too frequent mass shootings, repeated climate catastrophes, and police violence against people of color. While we can't tie any one of those events directly to the levels of symptoms observed in these data, we know that a lot was going on between 2020 and 2022. Those are all important things for researchers and policymakers to be thinking about, Collier Villaume said.

Collier Villaume and her team plan to continue following these trends over time, possibly conducting a follow-up study with additional Household Pulse Survey data or other large national surveys. I am interested in understanding the role that economic precarity plays in wellbeing more broadly, she said. Id like to expand the study with a more in-depth survey, or to engage with a qualitative collaborator to use methods like focus group or interview research to understand how people are experiencing economic stability or uncertainty during stressful times, what thoughts and concerns are driving their experiences.

The study is titled Age Disparities in Prevalence of Anxiety and Depression Among U.S. Adults During the COVID-19 Pandemic. In addition to Collier Villaume and Adam, Shanting Chen is an author of the study.

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Young adults show more mental health distress during the COVID ... - Northwestern Now

Fibromyalgia Symptoms Unimpacted by COVID-19 Pandemic – MD Magazine

December 1, 2023

Mary-Ann Fitzcharles, MD, FRCPC, MBChB

Credit: American College of Rheumatology

According to standard self-reported questionnaires completed 5 years apart, the symptoms of fibromyalgia remained stable or improved during the COVID-19 pandemic. Although results were unexpected, investigators believed the findings may be related to a variety of influences including a slower life pace during the pandemic, resilience to extended stressors, and scoring significantly higher than healthy controls in all measures, which may mean changes during the pandemic could represent a regression to the mean. This data was presented at theAmerican College of Rheumatologys 2023 Convergencein San Diego, California.1

Fibromyalgia symptoms fluctuate, with exacerbation commonly associated with stressors, wrote investigator Mary-Ann Fitzcharles, MD, FRCPC, MBChB, associate professor of medicine in the Division of Rheumatology at McGill University, QC, Canada, and colleagues. The COVID-19 pandemic was a cause of prolonged stress due to factors such as restricted medical care, social isolation, actual COVID infection, and changes in activity or work status. Worsening of health status in fibromyalgia could be anticipated.

Investigators using survey data to compare health status pre-pandemic (2017) and in August 2022 among patients with fibromyalgia and healthy controls to determine the impact the pandemic had on this patient population. Information collected included demographics, perception of health status change, symptom characteristics, and emotional perceptions regarding the pandemic. Participants also filled out the Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ), the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ) for depression and anxiety, the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI), the Physical Activity Self-Administered Questionnaire (AQAP), and the ED-5D-5L Quality of Life Questionnaire. Emotions related to the pandemic were assessed using the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS). Analyses, including the Fischer Exact test, Wilk-Shapiro test, and Kruskal-Wallis test, adjusted for variables.

A total of 32 women with fibromyalgia and 21 healthy female controls completed the survey. Participants were predominantly White, although there were significant differences regarding body mass index, which was higher in the patient population, living alone, and work status. Approximately one third (34%) of patients with fibromyalgia experienced COVID-19 infection compared with 14% of healthy controls. The patient group reported more infection-related complications (9% vs 0%, respectively), as well as changes in work status (56% vs 43%, respectively). Adjustments in treatment tended to be non-pharmacological (47%) than pharmacological (25%).

While emotions related to COVID-19 were comparable between cohorts, patients with fibromyalgia reported a perceived worsening of pain (53% vs 5%, respectively). However, this was without change on the questionnaire-based measurement. Interestingly, 16% of patients with fibromyalgia reported an improvement in symptoms during the pandemic, compared with only 5% of controls.

Patients had greater COVID-19 perceived anxiety (3.8 vs 2.5, respectively), although there were no differences for numbers screened positive for depression and anxiety on the PHQ.

Quality of life was significantly improved for the patient group compared with controls. Prior to the pandemic, the average total FIQ score for patients was 62.81 compared with 50.91 during the pandemic, representing a -11.91 change. Conversely, the total FIQ score for healthy controls was 7.63 pre-pandemic, which increased to 25.04 during COVID-19, representing a 17.41 change. All other questionnaire measures were unchanged for both cohorts.

Physical activity levels were maintained in the patient group but decreased in healthy controls. Clinical measures for patients with fibromyalgia were linked to function, affective status and total FIQ, although they were not related to changes in pain or demographic variables. There were no significant correlations in the healthy control group.

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Fibromyalgia Symptoms Unimpacted by COVID-19 Pandemic - MD Magazine

City sales tax growth attributed to inflation, COVID-19 recovery – Columbia Missourian

November 27, 2023

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City sales tax growth attributed to inflation, COVID-19 recovery - Columbia Missourian

Australians most vulnerable to COVID-19 are the least vaccinated. Here’s how the government’s responding – ABC News

November 27, 2023

Australia is currently riding its next big COVID-19 wave into the holiday season.

And our ability to measure that wave has changed since the pandemic began.

The government used to rely on people testing to record the number of infections. Now, it looks to wastewater, how many scripts are being filled for antivirals, and COVID-related hospital admissions.

The definition of infected and the way the government records that data have also changed.

In that same vein, when it comes to being vaccinated against the virus, being able to record that data has become difficult.

Since the pandemic began, the government has moved the goalposts a few times on what the exact definition of being fully vaccinated is.

The Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation's most recent update to the eligibility criteria for a booster says anyone over the age of 75 should get a vaccine if it has been six months since their last dose.

Adults aged between 65 and 74 should consider getting a COVID-19 vaccine six months after their last dose, along with those between 18 and 64 who are severely immunocompromised.

The first half of this year, before April 2023, shows a success story.On the whole, governments kept aged care residents who are pretty much the most vulnerable section of the population vaccinated.

The definition of vaccination changed occasionally, but, on the whole, almost all aged care residents were vaccinated.

The second half, since April 2023, shows what has happened in "post-emergency Australia". A new definition of vaccination applied.

The government now regards someone as vaccinated if they have had a booster shot or been infected with COVID-19 within the past six months. In other words, it wants all aged care residents to have some form of recent immunity.

However, the country has never managed to get more than two-thirds of aged care residents "vaccinated" under this definition.

And the vaccination rate has collapsed since September. It has now dropped below 40 per cent for this vulnerable part of the community.

According to Council of the Ageing CEO Patricia Sparrow, it is up to the aged care providers to work with the government to ensure their residents are vaccinated.

"It should be joint responsibility," she said.

"We need providers to particularly proactively facilitate timely vaccinations for their residents as they do with flu vaccination, and that they're talking to their residents and families about whether are they up-to-date."

The government says it is "committed to increasing the number of aged care residents who have their COVID vaccination up-to-date".

"The Department of Health and Aged Care is continuing outreach to homes with the lowest COVID-19 vaccine uptake," a government spokesperson said in a statement.

It said it was "working with Primary Health Networks to support residential aged care homes needing assistance with accessing COVID-19 vaccine providers".

The spokesperson pointed to the incentive for doctors and pharmacists to visit homes to deliver boosters from $57 to $118, although it seems as though the financial incentive has not been enough.

The government has recorded 58,500 aged care residents have received a booster dose in the past six months and those "rates continue to rise".

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Australians most vulnerable to COVID-19 are the least vaccinated. Here's how the government's responding - ABC News

Gig workers saw greater financial hardship during COVID-19 than other workers – Phys.org

November 27, 2023

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Many gig workers experienced financial hardships during the COVID-19 pandemic, including food insecurity and trouble paying bills, according to a recent study published in Work and Occupations.

"In a nutshell, our study shows gig workers were harmed more by the COVID-19 pandemic than any other workers," said Dr. Mathieu Despard, a co-author on the paper and faculty member in UNC Greensboro's Department of Social Work.

Despardwho collaborated closely with first author Daniel Auguste at Florida Atlantic University and co-author Stephen Roll at Washington University in St. Louissaid the findings challenge the popular premise in the United States that gig work provides a sustainable alternative to traditional employment.

These results suggest that gig working can make it tricky for these individuals to make financial ends meet, said Despard.

"We have this very romantic narrative in this country that we're the land of opportunity. If you want to start your own business, you can go for it. But when you peel that narrative back, you begin to realize that people who are doing gig work are often struggling for economic survival."

The scientists found that about 33% of surveyed gig workers experienced food insecurity, 12% had skipped housing payments, and 33% had unpaid credit card findings between April 2020 and June 2021. Economic hardships were more pronounced for gig workers who had children, those with less savings, and those who worked multiple gig jobs.

Despard says that the unreliable nature of gig work can help explain why many experience more financial difficulty. For example, a food delivery driver may have one busy night followed by a day with little work. "This introduces unpredictable volatility, which can make it difficult to pay your bills and plan ahead," he says.

Their findings are relevant to the approximately 15% of Americans who have gig-worked at some point, according to the PEW Research Center.

A strength of the new study is the robust sample of gig workers, says Despard. The Social Policy Institute at Washington University in St. Louis's Socioeconomic Impacts of COVID-19 Survey includes responses from 4,756 workers from a range of ages, income, genders, and race and ethnicities. Approximately 29% of respondents had engaged in gig work in the three months before they were surveyed.

"It's a rigorous survey, and the respondents looked like the U.S. population," Despard says. "The data is nationally representative."

Despard says his research is, in general, driven by a desire to better understand the structural barriers that prevent Americans from reaching their financial goals.

"The bottom line is that it should not be this difficult for people to meet their basic needs because it has a toll on their mental health, a toll on their physical health, and it takes time away from their families," Despard says.

More information: Daniel Auguste et al, Democratizing the Economy or Introducing Economic Risk? Gig Work During the COVID-19 Pandemic, Work and Occupations (2023). DOI: 10.1177/07308884231202032

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Gig workers saw greater financial hardship during COVID-19 than other workers - Phys.org

With Public Health Systems Largely Leaving COVID-19 Vaccines to … – WTTW News

November 27, 2023

Bernadette Kelly, 93, got the COVID-19 vaccine when it first came out, and she had the follow-up shots when they came out, too. But with the latest booster, I didnt even think about it, she said. (Amanda Vinicky / WTTW News)

Bernadette Kelly, 93, got the COVID-19 vaccine when it first came out, and she had the follow-up shots when they came out, too.

But with the latest booster, I didnt even think about it, she said.

While the public health emergency is officially over, COVID-19 is still making people sick, and health officials say theyve entered a new front.

During the height of the pandemic, people became used to the public health system providing immunizations and treatments at pop-up mass vaccine clinics and public testing sites, Illinois Department of Public Health Director Sameer Vohra said.

Those have now largely disappeared.

Were moving to those things being delivered, just like you get everything else, with a regular health care delivery system, like doctors offices, he said.

Vohra said adjustment is a struggle.

The change, he said, is for all the good reasons. Were no longer in a public health emergency.

But its still a change that requires raising awareness and education.

Kelly ended up receiving her COVID-19 vaccine in early November, at a Rush University System for Health pop-up clinic at the Martha Washington Apartments senior community, where Kelly lives.

Kelly hadnt intended to get the latest booster; she was meeting her friends for coffee as she does every Monday. On this particular morning, though, Vohra was there, along with Centers for Disease Control Director Dr. Mandy Cohen and American Medical Association President Dr. Jesse Ehrenfeld.

While we all wish we could be done with COVID, it is still here with us, Cohen said. Its here and making people pretty sick. And what were seeing is in Illinois and the Chicago area, COVID starting to tick up. Were expecting to see more COVID here through the winter season. As we know, when we gather indoors this virus likes to spread. So we want to make sure folks know to get vaccinated now.

While early November was ideal to get vaccinated ahead of Thanksgiving, now is a good time leading up to those wholl be in large groups for Christmas festivities.

As has been the case since COVID-19 emerged, Cohen said its particularly important for those over 65 that are at the highest risk of going into the hospital or dying, still, of COVID.

Rush Hospital outreach street nurse Joshua Dueshop vaccinates a resident of the Martha Washington senior apartments in North Center. (Amanda Vinicky / WTTW News)

Rush Hospital outreach street nurse Joshua Dueshop says he is well aware that some people have COVID fatigue. But he tries to educate them that it will be like the flu, with an annual vaccine recommended.

My personal thing is, I tell them to get it (the vaccine) to protect the ones who cant babies, kids that cant get it, adults that cantget it, are immunosuppressed, Dueshop said. So even if you dont necessarily believe in it, you can get it. Youre still protecting them.

COVID-19 isnt the only concern.

RSV, or respiratory syncytia, and the flu are on Cohens radar, too.

Flu shots have long been recommended by the CDC.

But for the first time, theres now an RSV vaccine for adults over age 60.

Infants can also receive a shot to protect against RSV, though theres been a shortage that Cohen chalks up to pediatricians underestimating demand for the new product.

Cohen said public-private partnerships like the clinic Rush did at Kellys senior home show that the healthcare system is continuing to put to use lessons learned during the pandemic.

Follow Amanda Vinicky on Twitter:@AmandaVinicky

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With Public Health Systems Largely Leaving COVID-19 Vaccines to ... - WTTW News

12 Worst States for Working-Age COVID-19 Hospitalization Surges – ThinkAdvisor

November 27, 2023

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The United States went into the Thanksgiving holiday week with a high mortality rate and a modest surge of people entering hospitals with COVID-19.

The United States recorded about 214,382 deaths from all causes in October, according to early death data published along with U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention flu tracking report. The death count was 0.3% lower than in October 2022, but it was 10% higher than in October 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic came to light.

Another set of data, a U.S. Department of Health and Human Services COVID-19 and flu hospitalization tracking spreadsheet, shows that hospital admissions for COVID-19 continue to be much higher than they were during the week ending July 1, when the pandemic seem to be fading away.

For people ages 20 through 59, the number of hospitalizations reported for the week ending Nov. 18 was 3,593. In the median state, the working-age hospitalization count was 9.7% higher than in the week ending Nov. 11, and it was 263% higher than in the week ending July 1.

For a look at the 12 states where the working-age hospitalization count increased the most between the week ending Nov. 11 and the week Nov. 18, see the gallery above.

For figures for all 50 states, Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia, see the table below.

What it means:Clients and their financial professionals face the same old uncertainty about when, or if, mortality will get back to where it was in 2019.

The context:The current COVID-19 wave is much smaller than the surges that hit earlier in the pandemic.

Hospitals admitted about 147,000 adults with COVID-19 during the week ending Jan. 15, 2022, and about 16,000 U.S. residents died from COVID-19 during the week ending Jan. 16, 2021.

But theUnited States appears to be on track to record about 300,000 more deaths than it recorded in 2019, when 2.9 million people died.

The excess mortality is caused partly by COVID-19 itself; partly because of the effects of COVID-19 on health care, the health care system and society as a whole; and partly because of other causes, such as opioids.

Credit: Adobe Stock

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12 Worst States for Working-Age COVID-19 Hospitalization Surges - ThinkAdvisor

COVID-19 Hospital Admissions Could be More Accurately Predicted … – Drug Topics

November 27, 2023

Analyzing wastewater for SARS-CoV-2 RNA fragments could help more accurately predict future hospitalizations from the disease and allow health systems time to prepare for seasonal surges, according to new research published in the journal Infectious Disease Modelling.1

The COVID-19 pandemic, which has experienced ebbs and flows since it first began, has shown how important it is for hospitals to be prepared for a potential influx of patients. This is why its imperative to have forecasting methodologies that can provide advanced warning of potential surges in COVID-19 cases.

Predicting future hospitalizations using wastewater data helps get our public health partners in front of surges before they happen so they are prepared when new patients need to be admitted and can distribute resources accordingly, Dustin Hill, lead researcher on the study, said in a release.2

Investigators from Syracuse University conducted a study where they developed and tested a predictive model for incident COVID-19 hospital admissions using wastewater data. Data was collected from 109 wastewater treatment plants across 56 counties in New York State from April 2020 through June 2022.

The researchers included different covariates in the study, such as COVID-19 vaccine coverage in the county, comorbidities, demographic variables, and holiday gatherings. Wastewater samples were collected using 24-hour composite sampling, which were shipping to regional laboratories for extraction and quantification of SARS-CoV-2 virus.

Investigators found that SARS-CoV-2 RNA fragment concentrations in the wastewater correlated with new hospital admission per 100000 up to 10 days prior to admission. Models that included wastewater data were 15% more accurate when compared to models that only included clinical case data.

Additionally, predicted hospital admissions correlated highly with observed admissions, with an average difference of 0.013 hospitalizations per 100000.

Study limitations include that where someone contracted COVID-19 may not align with where they are hospitalized, that certain covariates were not available at the sewershed level, and that between-lab variance might be masking some correlations and effects that are stronger with single-lab analyses.

Our findings indicate that wastewater surveillance improves prediction models for hospitalizations by 11 percent over models that use case data at the county level and by 15 percent for regional hospitalization estimates, said Hill.2 When looking at how many beds a hospital has available, those percentages can make a big difference in whether that hospital is going to have space for new patients or not, and this data can help them get ready for changes.

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COVID-19 Hospital Admissions Could be More Accurately Predicted ... - Drug Topics

Why COVID-19 hit non-white Americans hardest – Futurity: Research News

November 27, 2023

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A new book explores why COVID-19 deaths disproportionately affected non-white Americans.

Mortality rose across all demographics during first few years of the pandemic, but COVID-19 hit non-white Americans the hardest.

According to the US Census Bureau and the National Center for Health Statistics, the largest increase in mortality in 2020 was among the American Indian and Native Alaskan populations, which saw an increase of 36.7%.

The increase in mortality was 29.7% among Black Americans and 29.4% among Asian Americans. For comparison, the increase in mortality among white Americans was less than 20%.

Melvin Thomas, a professor of sociology at North Carolina State University, is the author and co-editor of the new book Race, Ethnicity and the COVID-19 Pandemic (University of Cincinnati Press, 2023).

Here, he talks about the role that racial inequality playedand continues to playin shaping health outcomes in the United States.

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Why COVID-19 hit non-white Americans hardest - Futurity: Research News

Pfizer Study Shows COVID-19 Vaccination Reduces Symptoms … – Drug Topics

November 27, 2023

In the United States, there is currently no federal law guaranteeing workers paid days off, and many are not entitled to unpaid time off.

According to a 2020 report from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 78% of workers have access to paid sick time.1 This means that close to 1 in 4 workers may experience financial hardship when illness strikes.

COVID-19 can have significant effects on individuals wellbeing, causing a decline in their health-related quality of life. The infection symptoms, such as fever, cough, and fatigue often thwart productivity, making it harder to work and get daily tasks done.

COVID-19 vaccination, particularly the bivalent BNT162b2 formulation, has been shown to have very high efficacy against severe disease and moderate efficacy against symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection, according to the World Health Organization.2

A study published in October and led by Manuela Di Fusco, senior director of Health Economics and Outcomes Research at Pfizer, analyzed the effects of Pfizers BA.4/5 BNT162b2 COVID-19 vaccine on symptoms, Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQoL), and work productivity.3

The study enrolled 643 participants including 316 individuals who had been vaccinated and 327 who were unvaccinated. The unvaccinated cohort included individuals that never received any COVID-19 vaccine and those who were not up-to-date(if their last dose was over 12 months ago). The average age of the participants was 46.5 years old, with 25.7% having one or more comorbid condition. This study gathered patient-reported outcomes from individuals who were tested for SARS-CoV-2 at CVS Health test sites, targeting adults with a positive test result and at least one acute COVID-19 symptom.

The study utilized online surveys to collect baseline information on participants, including demographics, comorbidities, COVID-19 vaccination and infection history. Participants also provided information on COVID-19 antiviral treatment and changes in vaccination and infection status. The study measured outcomes such as symptoms, HRQoL, fatigue, work productivity, and activity impairment using validated measures at different time points over a four-week period.

The findings of the study revealed that the vaccinated group reported fewer acute symptoms, particularly systemic and respiratory symptoms commonly associated with COVID-19. Further, while all participants experienced some adverse effects on their overall HRQoL, the vaccinated group demonstrated a better work performance compared to the unvaccinated group. This was evidenced by lower rates of absenteeism and fewer work hours lost among those who had received the vaccine.

The researchers concluded that the vaccinated group experienced fewer and less persistent symptoms than the unvaccinated group. Moreover, their improved work performance highlights the positive impact of COVID-19 vaccination on individuals' ability to carry out their daily responsibilities effectively.

This study, funded by Pfizer, adds to the body of evidence supporting the role of COVID-19 vaccination in reducing the severity and frequency of symptoms experienced by those who receive it. Regarding their study on patient-reported outcomes, the authors wrote, it solidifies evidence indicating that the effectiveness of BA.4/5 BNT162b2 on COVID-19 disease could translate to extra benefits of reduction in the frequency and burden of symptoms, supporting faster recovery and return to work.

This article originally appeared in Managed Healthcare Executive.

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Pfizer Study Shows COVID-19 Vaccination Reduces Symptoms ... - Drug Topics

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