WHO: Up to 36 million Europeans suffering from 'long Covid'
- Nearly 36 million people in the World Health Organization's European region may have developed prolonged health impairments after coronavirus infections since the pandemic began.
- Post By Angel Dimoski
- 16:15, 27 June, 2023
Copenhagen, 27 June 2023 (dpa/MIA) - Nearly 36 million people in the World Health Organization's European region may have developed prolonged health impairments after coronavirus infections since the pandemic began.
This corresponds to about one in 30 Europeans over the past three years, WHO Regional Director Hans Kluge said at a press conference in Copenhagen on Tuesday. Much more needs to be done to understand long Covid more precisely, he said.
"Long Covid remains a complex condition we still know very little about," Kluge said. Without the development of comprehensive diagnostics and forms of treatment, society will never truly recover from the pandemic, he added.
The WHO counts a total of 53 countries in its European Region, including not only the EU but also countries to the east of it, as far as Central Asia. Long Covid is the term used to describe symptoms that persist beyond the acute phase of the disease, which lasts four weeks, or which then reappear.
Photo: MIA Archive