#19,010
From very early on in the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, we saw concerns raised over the potential long-term impact of COVID infection; often centered around cardiac or neurological involvement.
In early April 2020, the New York Fire Department reported a 400% increase in sudden cardiac arrest death calls beginning in late March (see NBC affiliate Massive Spike in NYC ‘Cardiac Arrest’ Deaths Seen as Sign of COVID-19 Under counting).
In June, JAMA published an original investigation which found a huge increase in out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in New York City during the peak of their COVID-19 epidemic, writing:
From March 1 to April 25, 2020, New York City, New York (NYC), reported 17 118 COVID-19–related deaths. On April 6, 2020, out-of-hospital cardiac arrests peaked at 305 cases, nearly a 10-fold increase from the prior year.
Admittedly, most of these cases were never tested for COVID-19, making any link circumstantial. The following month, however, in JAMA: Two Studies Linking SARS-CoV-2 Infection To Cardiac Injury, we saw physical evidence of cardiac injury due to COVID infection, even among a relatively young cohort of previously healthy adults.
By mid-summer, it was becoming apparent that COVID was far more than just an acute respiratory infection (see Nature Med. Review: Extrapulmonary manifestations of COVID-19), and could produce blot clots, along with neurological, renal, and cardiovascular damage.In late July we saw this cautionary editorial published in JAMA.
Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) and the Heart—Is Heart Failure the Next Chapter?Since then, studies showing post-acute impacts of COVID infection have exploded, with many citing repeated COVID infections as increasing the risk of long-term health damage. A few (of many) include:
Clyde W. Yancy, MD, MSc1,2; Gregg C. Fonarow, MD3,4
JAMA Cardiol. Published online July 27, 2020. doi:10.1001/jamacardio.2020.3575
Nature: Long-term Cardiovascular Outcomes of COVID-19
AHA: COVID-19 May Trigger New-Onset High Blood Pressure
NIH: Study Shows SARS-CoV-2 Infects Coronary Arteries, Increases Plaque Inflammation
EHJ: Accelerated Vascular Ageing After COVID-19 Infection: The CARTESIAN Study
Terms like `Long COVID' and PASC (Postacute Sequelae of COVID) are now officially recognized, but their impact remains poorly quantified (and often disputed).
Much of the evidence is anecdotal, or inferential, because 90% of the world stopped testing, and reporting on ICU admissions and deaths, more than 3 years ago (No News Is . . . Now Commonplace).
The world desperately wanted to move on from COVID, and it decided the best way to do so was by touching up the X-rays. But of course, the health burden of COVID - recognized or not - remains.
Today we've a study from the Norwegian Institute of Public Health and others, that looks at the trajectory of primary care consultations in Norway both before - during - and after the COVID pandemic.
What they found was the number of consultations in 2024 were about 7% above pre‑pandemic expectations (see graphic at top of this blog). Most of these were coded as being for respiratory, fatigue, psychological, cognitive, and some infectious/gastrointestinal complaints.
Patterns that have often been associated with PASC or `Long COVID', but remain exceedingly difficult to establish a causal link.
The authors - who cite (and are critical of) Norway’s national COVID strategy which `. . . emphasizes the assumed benefits of sustaining population immunity through repeated SARS-CoV-2 infections' - hypothesize that repeated COVID infections have led to population‑level health impacts, with PASC and post‑COVID immune dysfunction driving much of the cited excess primary care consultations.
The authors note, in particular, the impact this has had on women, children, adolescents, and young adults.
I've reproduced the abstract below, but you'll want to follow the link and read the full article. I'll have a brief postscript when you return.
Research
Open access
Published: 02 January 2026
article number , (2026)Download PDF
We are providing an unedited version of this manuscript to give early access to its findings. Before final publication, the manuscript will undergo further editing. Please note there may be errors present which affect the content, and all legal disclaimers apply.
Abstract
Background
The risk of post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC) is estimated at 3–6% per infection in 2024. We hypothesized that widespread SARS-CoV-2 infections could lead to population-level consequences. Our previous study identified substantial increases in Norwegian primary healthcare consultations in 2023—compared to pre-pandemic levels—for conditions associated with acute COVID-19 and PASC. This study extended that analysis to 2024. We then assessed whether observed patterns were compatible with our hypothesis.
Methods
We used data from the Norwegian Syndromic Surveillance System, which captures nationwide primary healthcare consultations for 102 ICPC-2 codes (out of a possible 710) that are relevant for infectious disease surveillance and some post-acute infection syndromes. Bayesian linear regression models were fitted to 2010–2019 trends, adjusting for population changes, to estimate expected values for 2024. Excess consultations were calculated by age and sex. A COVID-19 community spread was proxied by vaccination-adjusted weekly hospitalization rates.
Results
In 2024, there were 17,800,365 consultations, corresponding to an absolute excess of 1,185,231 consultations, or a 7.1% relative excess, compared to the modelled baseline. The 10 code combinations with largest absolute excess in 2024 were respiratory infections (325,726 excess consultations; 20% relative excess), fatigue (205,381; 70%), psychological symptom/complaint other (188,978; 87%), acute stress reaction (182,079; 76%), feeling depressed (126,783; 133%), hyperkinetic disorder (112,763; 116%), abdominal pain/cramps general (84,544; 29%), memory disturbance (39,177; 63%), conjunctivitis (34,643; 59%), and infectious disease other/NOS (33,556; 81%). COVID-19 community spread showed the strongest correlations with conjunctivitis, strep throat, respiratory infections as a group (R**), fatigue, infectious disease other, memory disturbances, and pneumonia. Deviations from pre-pandemic trends varied: respiratory and psychological disorders worsened from 2020 onward and several conditions showed dramatic excess from 2022–2024. Females 15–29, children, adolescents, and young adults had disproportionately large relative excesses for consultations for memory disturbances.
Conclusions
Primary healthcare consultations in 2024 significantly exceeded pre-pandemic expectations, especially for conditions linked to acute COVID-19 and PASC, though the two cannot be differentiated in these data. While other factors undoubtedly also play a role, findings are compatible with ongoing population-level health impacts associated with repeated SARS-CoV-2 infections, particularly among women, children, adolescents, and young adults. These results emerged under a national COVID-19 strategy that does not account for post-acute consequences of SARS-CoV-2 infection.
The author's hypothesis, and findings, certainly resonate with what I've seen, and written extensively about, for the past 6 years. But proving causality is always difficult, even when the patterns neatly `fit' the hypothesis.
Society has used this lack of data to trivialize COVID infection (and reinfection) to the point that vaccine uptake has plummeted, and mask-wearing - and other protective measures - have become anathema.A task that is made even more onerous by the deliberate dismantling of COVID surveillance, testing, and reporting around the world.
Meanwhile, COVID continues to exact a heavy toll, while the public remains oblivious to - or highly skeptical of - other threats that may be in the pipeline.
While ignorance may yield temporary bliss, we risk a very rude awakening down the road.
