Three quarters of UK long COVID sufferers working less -survey
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[November 09, 2022]
By David Milliken
LONDON (Reuters) - More than three quarters
of British people who have suffered persistent ill health following a
COVID-19 infection have had to cut back or change the work they do,
according to a survey on the impact of long COVID published on
Wednesday.
The survey of 1,002 people, conducted by market research company
Censuswide in October for recruitment website Indeed, adds to signs that
long COVID continues to be a factor behind widespread labour shortages
in Britain.
Some 98% of long COVID sufferers said the condition had limited their
ability to work, 78% had needed to cut back or change their work and 19%
had ceased work altogether.
"Our research shows that the health emergency has become an employment
crisis," said Danny Stacy, a senior adviser at Indeed.
Long COVID, a collection of symptoms ranging from pain and heart
palpitations to insomnia and brain fog, can last for many months after
initial infection.
Britain's most recent official labour market data showed that a record
proportion of people classified as "economically inactive" - neither
working nor looking for a job - were suffering from long-term sickness.
In absolute terms, the number of working-age people who are long-term
sick has risen by 378,000 since early 2020.
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People shop at market stalls, with
skyscrapers of the CIty of London financial district seen behind,
amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in London,
Britain, January 15, 2021. REUTERS/Toby Melville/Files
Bank of England officials have
highlighted lengthy waits for routine treatment in Britain's public
healthcare system, as well as long COVID, as potential reasons for
the rise, which limits the economy's ability to grow without
boosting inflation.
The Office for National Statistics estimates that 2.1 million people
- 3.3% of the population - were suffering from long COVID as of Oct.
1, which it defined as symptoms that had lasted more than four weeks
after a COVID-19 infection.
Of those, 73% said long COVID was limiting their day-to-day
activities, and 16% - 333,000 people - said their activities had
been significantly limited.
In the Indeed survey, 59% of people diagnosed with long COVID said
they felt more tired, 42% felt physically weaker, 37% found it
harder to concentrate and 19% were in pain when working.
(Reporting by David Milliken; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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