Long-COVID is associated with increased absenteeism from work.

Publication date: Jun 06, 2025

Long-COVID, defined as COVID-19 symptoms persisting for more than 3 months, may lead to persistent health issues requiring extensive medical care. Despite its long-term health impact, the economic impact of long-COVID remains understudied. This study examined whether individuals with long-COVID had more missed workdays compared to those without long-COVID. Adults (≄18 years old) with full-time jobs were identified from the 2022 Full-Year Population Characteristics file of the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS). A weighted two-part model was used to identify factors associated with missed workdays due to illness. The total population analyzed included 131,685,516 adults (unweighted n = 8,210), with an average (SD) age of 43 (14) years. Among them, 46% were female and 62% were non-Hispanic White. Approximately 7% of the population experienced long-COVID. Individuals with long-COVID reported an average of 8 days missed from work (SD: 12 days), while those without long-COVID reported an average of 4 days missed (SD: 9 days). The two-part model revealed that individuals with long-COVID had 2. 54 more missed workdays compared to those without long-COVID (p 

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Concepts Keywords
Hispanic Absenteeism
Illness Adolescent
Lead Adult
Workdays Aged
COVID-19
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
SARS-CoV-2
Young Adult

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH Long COVID
disease IDO history
disease IDO process

Original Article

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