<p>People who take vaccination after an infection with SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for Covid-19, are likely to have a decrease in the likelihood of long Covid-19 symptoms, finds a large study.</p>.<p>A majority of people, including children, persistently experience symptoms like brain fog, fatigue, and breathlessness ranging from months to years, post a Covid-19 infection.</p>.<p>The study, published by The BMJ, showed that a first vaccine dose was associated with an initial 13 per cent decrease in the odds of long Covid-19.</p>.<p>Receiving a second vaccine dose, 12 weeks later, was associated with a further 9 per cent decrease in the odds of long Covid-19, and this improvement was sustained at least over an average follow-up of nine weeks.</p>.<p>Vaccination "may contribute to a reduction in the population health burden of long Covid-19, at least in the first few months after vaccination", wrote D Ayoubkhani, from the UK's Office for National Statistics (ONS) in the paper.</p>.<p>The findings are based on the latest survey by the ONS that shows that 44 per cent of people who report long Covid-19 have had symptoms for at least one year, two thirds of whom report symptoms severe enough to limit their day-to-day activities.</p>.<p>So a team of researchers set out to estimate associations between Covid-19 vaccination and long Covid symptoms in adults with SARS-CoV-2 infection before vaccination.</p>.<p>They analysed data for 28,356 adults aged 18-69 years who received at least one Covid-19 vaccine dose after testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 infection, and tracked the presence of long Covid-19 symptoms over a seven month follow-up period (February to September 2021).</p>.<p>Long Covid-19 symptoms of any severity were reported by 6,729 participants (24 per cent) at least once during follow-up.</p>.<p>The researchers noted as the study is observational, "causality cannot be inferred".</p>.<p>But, "our results suggest that vaccination of people previously infected may be associated with a reduction in the burden of long Covid-19 on population health, at least in the first few months after vaccination," the researchers said.</p>.<p>They call for further research into the long term relationship between vaccination and long Covid-19, and studies "to understand the biological mechanisms underpinning any improvements in symptoms after vaccination, which may contribute to the development of therapeutics for long Covid-19."</p>
<p>People who take vaccination after an infection with SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for Covid-19, are likely to have a decrease in the likelihood of long Covid-19 symptoms, finds a large study.</p>.<p>A majority of people, including children, persistently experience symptoms like brain fog, fatigue, and breathlessness ranging from months to years, post a Covid-19 infection.</p>.<p>The study, published by The BMJ, showed that a first vaccine dose was associated with an initial 13 per cent decrease in the odds of long Covid-19.</p>.<p>Receiving a second vaccine dose, 12 weeks later, was associated with a further 9 per cent decrease in the odds of long Covid-19, and this improvement was sustained at least over an average follow-up of nine weeks.</p>.<p>Vaccination "may contribute to a reduction in the population health burden of long Covid-19, at least in the first few months after vaccination", wrote D Ayoubkhani, from the UK's Office for National Statistics (ONS) in the paper.</p>.<p>The findings are based on the latest survey by the ONS that shows that 44 per cent of people who report long Covid-19 have had symptoms for at least one year, two thirds of whom report symptoms severe enough to limit their day-to-day activities.</p>.<p>So a team of researchers set out to estimate associations between Covid-19 vaccination and long Covid symptoms in adults with SARS-CoV-2 infection before vaccination.</p>.<p>They analysed data for 28,356 adults aged 18-69 years who received at least one Covid-19 vaccine dose after testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 infection, and tracked the presence of long Covid-19 symptoms over a seven month follow-up period (February to September 2021).</p>.<p>Long Covid-19 symptoms of any severity were reported by 6,729 participants (24 per cent) at least once during follow-up.</p>.<p>The researchers noted as the study is observational, "causality cannot be inferred".</p>.<p>But, "our results suggest that vaccination of people previously infected may be associated with a reduction in the burden of long Covid-19 on population health, at least in the first few months after vaccination," the researchers said.</p>.<p>They call for further research into the long term relationship between vaccination and long Covid-19, and studies "to understand the biological mechanisms underpinning any improvements in symptoms after vaccination, which may contribute to the development of therapeutics for long Covid-19."</p>