Author:
Kabir Md. Feroz,Yin Khin Nyein,Jeffree Mohammad Saffree,Ahmedy Fatimah Binti,Zainudin Muhamad Faizal,Htwe Ohnmar,Jahan Sharmila,Hossain Md. Zahid,Hossain K. M. Amran,Hossain Tofajjal,Jahid Iqbal Kabir,Chakrovorty Sonjit Kumar
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Pain is one of the prevalent Long COVID Symptoms (LCS). Pain interferes with the quality of life (QoL) and induces disease burden.
Purpose
The study aimed to elicit the clinical presentation of pain and determine the relationships between QoL and pain in LCS.
Methods
This household cross-sectional study of 12,925 SARS-CoV-2 cases between July and December 2021 was carried out in eight administrative divisions of Bangladesh. Stratified random sampling from the cases retrieved from the Ministry of Health was employed. Symptom screening was performed through COVID-19 Yorkshire Rehabilitation Scale, and long COVID was diagnosed according to World Health Organization (WHO) criteria. The analyses were conducted using IBM SPSS (Version 20.00).
Results
The prevalence of pain in long COVID was between 01 and 3.1% in the studied population. The study also found five categories of pain symptoms as LCS in Bangladesh: muscle pain 3.1% (95% CI; 2.4–3.8), chest pain 2.4% (95% CI; 1.8–3.1), joint pain 2.8% (95% CI; 2.2–2.3), headache 3.1% (95% CI; 2.4–3.8), and abdominal pain 0.3% (95% CI; 0.01–0.5). People with LCS as pain, multiple LCS, and longer duration of LCS had significantly lower quality of life across all domains of the WHOQOL-BREF (P < 0.001) compared to asymptomatic cases.
Conclusion
Three out of ten people with long COVID experience painful symptoms, which can significantly reduce their quality of life. Comprehensive rehabilitation can improve the symptoms and reduce the burden of the disease.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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