From the Journals

Anxiety, your brain, and long COVID: What the research says


 

Lifestyle habits and risk of long COVID

Meanwhile, healthy lifestyle habits in those infected can reduce the risk of long COVID, research by Dr. Wang and colleagues found. They followed nearly 2,000 women with a positive COVID test over 19 months. Of these, 44%, or 871, developed long COVID. Compared with women who followed none of the healthy lifestyle habits evaluated, those with five to six of the habits had a 49% lower risk of long COVID.

The habits included: a healthy body mass index (18.5-24.9 kg/m2), never smoking, at least 150 minutes weekly of moderate to vigorous physical activity, moderate alcohol intake (5-15 grams a day), high diet quality, and good sleep (7-9 hours nightly).

Long-term solutions

Dr. Yasuda hopes that mental health care – of those infected and those not – will be taken more seriously. In a commentary on her own long COVID experience, she wrote, in part: “I fear for the numerous survivors of COVID-19 who do not have access to medical attention for their post-COVID symptoms. ... The mental health system needs to become prepared to receive survivors with different neuropsychiatric symptoms, including anxiety and depression.”

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Clinical trials: Top priority for long COVID
MDedge Internal Medicine
How providers are adjusting to clinical care post PHE
MDedge Internal Medicine
CDC cuts back hospital data reporting on COVID
MDedge Internal Medicine
COVID emergency over, but hundreds are still dying weekly
MDedge Internal Medicine
Review supports continued mask-wearing in health care visits
MDedge Internal Medicine
COVID boosters effective, but not for long
MDedge Internal Medicine
Study finds COVID-19 boosters don’t increase miscarriage risk
MDedge Internal Medicine
One in 10 people who had Omicron got long COVID: Study
MDedge Internal Medicine
COVID nonvaccination linked with avoidable hospitalizations
MDedge Internal Medicine
We may need a new defense against new COVID variants
MDedge Internal Medicine