Prevalence of persistent symptoms after having COVID-19 in a cohort in Suriname

Publication date

2023

Authors

Krishnadath, Ingrid
Harkisoen, Soeradj
Gopie, Fitzgerald
van der Hilst, Kwame
Hollum, Michelle
Woittiez, Lycke
Baldew, Se Sergio

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Objectives. To determine the prevalence of persistent symptoms after having coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in a cohort in Suriname, and assess the factors associated with long COVID. Methods. A sample of adults 18 years and older who were registered 3–4 months previously in a national database because of a positive COVID-19 test were selected. They were interviewed about socioeconomic characteristics, pre-COVID-19 health status and lifestyle, and symptoms during and after COVID-19. A subset of participants underwent a physical examination to determine body mass index, waist circumference, cardiovascular parameters, lung function, and functionality. Results. A total of 106 participants (mean age 49 (standard deviation 15) years; 62.3% female) were interviewed, of whom 32 were physically examined. The greatest proportion of participants was of Hindustani descent (22.6%). Overall, 37.7% of participants were physically inactive, 26.4% had hypertension or diabetes mellitus, and 13.2% had been previously diagnosed with heart disease. Most participants (56.6%) had experienced mild COVID-19 and 14.2% had experienced severe COVID-19. A large proportion (39.6%) had experienced at least one persistent symptom after recovery from acute COVID-19 and more women were affected (47.0% of women versus 27.5% of men). Fatigue and alopecia were the most common symptoms, followed by dyspnea and sleep disturbance. Differences were observed between ethnic groups. Based on physical examination, 45.0% of the subset was obese and 67.7% had very high waist-circumference. Conclusions. About 40% of the cohort had at least one persistent symptom 3–4 months after having had COVID-19, with differences observed by sex and ethnic group.

Keywords

Post-acute COVID-19 syndrome, prevalence, Suriname, Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Citation

Krishnadath, I, Harkisoen, S, Gopie, F, van der Hilst, K, Hollum, M, Woittiez, L & Baldew, S S 2023, 'Prevalence of persistent symptoms after having COVID-19 in a cohort in Suriname', Revista Panamericana de Salud Publica/Pan American Journal of Public Health, vol. 47, no. 1, e79. https://doi.org/10.26633/RPSP.2023.79