Jackie O revealed her battle with long COVID. Over half a million Australians could also experience it

Researchers, who have called for more data gathering and surveillance on long COVID, say it is likely tens of thousands of Australian adults will be unable to work in December due to the disease.

A close up of a man and woman's faces.

Jackie "O" Henderson (right) and her colleague Kyle Sandilands. Henderson revealed this week that she has long COVID. Source: AAP / Dan Peled

Key Points
  • Up to 500,000 Australians could experience long COVID symptoms by December, new modelling suggests.
  • Researchers say for some, symptoms will significantly limit their activities.
  • More than 10.5 million people in Australia have contracted COVID-19.
More than half a million people in Australia could experience long COVID with 110,000 of them suffering "significant impacts", according to modelling.

Researchers from the University of Tasmania and Deakin University used three different models to estimate how many people may have symptoms in early December.

They have called on the federal government to increase data gathering and surveillance, while the nation's peak body for general practitioners wants extra support to care for patients.

including extreme fatigue, which usually arise three months from the onset, with symptoms lasting at least two months.
Australian radio host Jackie "O" Henderson this week revealed her battle with long COVID as she announced she was stepping away from her KIIS FM show that she hosts with Kyle Sandilands.

Henderson, who contacted COVID-19 earlier this year, said she had not been "very well" ever since and was struggling with fatigue.

“Ever since picking up that virus, I’ve been to the doctor several times, and he said because I’ve been pushing myself every day, after the show, all I’ve been doing is sleeping, and I’m not getting better,” Henderson told listeners on Monday.

Henderson said while she was "fine" and "not dying", her doctor had warned if she kept trying to push through it would become "much worse".

Australian journalist Tracy Spicer has also told of her long COVID battle. In April, she told she was a "shadow of my former self".

What effect would long COVID have on Australia?

The World Health Organization estimates 10 to 20 per cent of people with the virus will experience long COVID.

The study's models suggest at least 160,000 people in Australia will likely be experiencing in early December and, for more than 35,000 people, their symptoms will significantly limit their activities.

The estimates increased to more than 500,000 and more than 110,000 respectively when researchers made adjustments based on work by the Australian National University.

"It is likely that several tens of thousands of Australian adults will be unable to work in December due to long COVID," report lead author, Professor Martin Hensher, said.

"This will not only have a detrimental impact on the health and wellbeing of our country, but many flow-on effects to the economy."
Professor Hensher said Australia was an outlier among similar countries in not having instituted large-scale national surveys about long COVID.

The study made several recommendations, including for greater surveillance of long COVID via regular Australian Bureau of Statistics and Australian Institute of Health and Welfare surveys.

More than 10.5 million people in Australia have contracted COVID-19.

Doctors last month told a federal parliamentary inquiry that long COVID clinics across the country were being inundated with requests and waitlists are increasing.
President of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, Professor Karen Price, is calling for greater education.

"One of the challenges we face is poor patient awareness of long COVID and lack of access to medical and allied health appointments, not to mention the possibility of substantial out-of-pocket fees in accessing multidisciplinary care," she said on Thursday.

"Patients are reporting problems navigating the health system to get proper long COVID assessment, diagnosis, and appropriate treatment and that must change.

"There are not enough specialist long COVID clinics, especially in rural and remote areas, and those clinics that are up and running can't meet demand."

The federal government has been contacted for comment.

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4 min read
Published 17 November 2022 4:33pm
Updated 17 November 2022 4:40pm
Source: AAP, SBS



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