接种 COVID-19 疫苗及其与 COVID-19 后长期发病率的相关性

Ahmed Mahdi Dawah, Meriam Ghardallou, A. R. Buthaina
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:长程科罗纳病毒病是指感染 COVID-19 病毒的人所经历的长期后果。急性 COVID-19 感染后持续存在或恶化的体征、症状和问题统称为长期 COVID。本研究试图确定接种疫苗与未接种疫苗的感染者在接种疫苗后 COVID 长期影响之间的相关性:研究采用横断面描述性设计,涵盖 416 人。研究病例代表已接种疫苗的感染者,他们与未接种疫苗的感染者相比,受到 COVID-19 的长期影响。既未感染、也未接种疫苗或未接种疫苗的个体被视为参照组,利用比值比(OR)估算相关性:结果:本研究显示,接种疫苗的人更常受到乏力(OR= 0.93;95% CI 0.49-1.7)、关节疼痛(OR= 0.7;95% CI 0.41-1.4)和注意力不集中(OR= 0.87;95% CI 0.44-1.7)的影响,因此本研究并未发现接种疫苗后COVID病症风险与接种状况有关的显著统计结果:结论:接种过疫苗和未接种疫苗的人出现第19次COVID后病症的相关性表明,在受感染的参与者中,出现这些病症的风险因素与疫苗接种状况无关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Receiving The COVID-19 Vaccine and Its Correlation with Post COVID-19 Long Term Morbidity
Back ground: Long-coronavirus disease is the long-term consequences of COVID-19 infection experienced by individuals who are infected with the virus. Signs, symptoms, and problems that persist or worsen following an acute COVID-19 infection are collectively referred to as long COVID. This study tries to determine the correlation between vaccination status and the post-COVID long-term effects in vaccinated versus non-vaccinated infected individuals. Methodology: It was a cross-sectional descriptive design, encompassing 416 individuals. Study cases represented vaccinated individuals who were infected and were suffering from the long-term consequences of COVID-19, as opposed to non-vaccinated infected individuals. Individuals who were neither infected, vaccinated, or unvaccinated considered as a reference group for estimating the correlation utilizing Odds ratio (OR). Result: This study revealed that vaccinated individuals were more commonly affected by weakness (OR= 0.93; 95% CI 0.49-1.7), joint pain (OR= 0.7; 95% CI 0.41-1.4), and concentration problems (OR= 0.87; 95% CI 0.44-1.7) so that present study didn’t notify significant statistical findings for post-COVID conditions risks regarding to vaccination status. Conclusion: The correlation between vaccinated and non-vaccinated individuals who develop post-COVID-19 conditions showed that risk factors for developing these conditions were independently associated with vaccination status among infected participants.
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