Department of Public Health Sciences (Dr. Mayo), Department of Family Medicine (Drs. Ellenbogen, Mendoza, and Russell), Department of Public Health Sciences and Nursing (Dr. Mendoza), and Center for Community Health and Prevention (Dr. Russell), University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, NY; Monroe County Department of Public Health, Rochester, NY (Dr. Mendoza) Nicole_Mayo@URMC.Rochester.edu
The authors reported no potential conflict of interest relevant to this article.
This new clinical entity is a formidable challenge
Long COVID is a new condition that requires comprehensive evaluation to understand the full, often long-term, effects of COVID-19. Our review of this condition substantiated that symptoms of long COVID often affect a variety of organs13,14 and have been observed to persist for ≥ 2 years.8
Some studies that have examined the long-term effects of COVID-19 included only participants who were not hospitalized; others include hospitalized patients exclusively. The literature is mixed in regard to including severity of initial infection as it relates to long COVID. Available research demonstrates that it is common for people with COVID-19 to experience persistent symptoms that can significantly impact daily life and well-being.
Likely, it will be several years before we even begin to understand the full extent of COVID-19. Until research elucidates the relationship between the disease and short- and long-term health outcomes, clinicians should:
acknowledge and address the reality of long COVID when meeting with persistently symptomatic patients,
provide support, therapeutic listening, and referral to rehabilitation as appropriate, and
offer information on the potential for long-term effects of COVID-19 to vaccine-hesitant patients.