Coronavirus COVID-19 - Global Health Pandemic #112

  • #1,441
Odd... I wonder why the numbers are so high in the US?

86% in US report brain fog, versus 15% in India

Among long-COVID patients who were not hospitalized during their initial infection (most participants), 86% of those in the United States reported brain fog, compared with 62% in Colombia, 63% in Nigeria, and 15% in India. Symptoms of anxiety or depression were reported by 70% of US participants, compared with roughly 68% in Colombia and less than 20% in Nigeria and India.

 
  • #1,442
Odd... I wonder why the numbers are so high in the US?

86% in US report brain fog, versus 15% in India

Among long-COVID patients who were not hospitalized during their initial infection (most participants), 86% of those in the United States reported brain fog, compared with 62% in Colombia, 63% in Nigeria, and 15% in India. Symptoms of anxiety or depression were reported by 70% of US participants, compared with roughly 68% in Colombia and less than 20% in Nigeria and India.

Maybe diet? IMO
 
  • #1,443
Maybe diet? IMO
That did cross my mind. I think it would be interesting if they surveyed those Americans about their diets. Do they eat healthily or eat a diet full of processed food? How much do they drink and how much do they exercise, etc. That would be pretty interesting to me.
 
  • #1,444
Odd... I wonder why the numbers are so high in the US?

86% in US report brain fog, versus 15% in India

Among long-COVID patients who were not hospitalized during their initial infection (most participants), 86% of those in the United States reported brain fog, compared with 62% in Colombia, 63% in Nigeria, and 15% in India. Symptoms of anxiety or depression were reported by 70% of US participants, compared with roughly 68% in Colombia and less than 20% in Nigeria and India.

My first thought was more ominous. Isn't air pollution extreme in India's cities? I wonder if their population isn't already compromised by that, and the increase in brain fog due to COVID is less apparent.

Of course anything that is self-reported is vulnerable to confirmation bias, people only reporting it if they want to believe it to be true. That's another possibility. I have no idea what Indians generally think about COVID.

It could also go the other way, where in the US people might deny they even have Long Covid unless their symptoms are stronger, thereby leaving out the large chunk of folks who might constitute the Long-Covid-but-no-brain-fog component.

All MOO
 
  • #1,445
The article suggested a reason.


These disparities likely suggest social and cultural differences in how long COVID is experienced and reported rather than differences in the biology of the virus. They may also reflect differences in access to health care, the authors said.

“It is culturally accepted in the U.S. and Colombia to talk about mental health and cognitive issues, whereas that is not the case in Nigeria and India,” senior author Igor Koralnik, MD, chief of neuro-infectious disease and global neurology at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, said in a news release.
 

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