Factors associated with quality of life in long-COVID syndrome

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Abstract

Approximately 10% of patients experience persistent symptoms following COVID-19, known as long-COVID syndrome. This cross-sectional study explored factors of quality of life (QoL) in 53 long-COVID patients. QoL was measured using the World Health Organization-Five Well-Being Index, fatigue with the Fatigue Visual Analogue Scale, and psychological health with the Depression-Anxiety-Stress-21 questionnaire. Six neuropsychological tests assessed information processing speed, verbal memory, visual memory, working memory, attention, language, fluency, recall, and visuospatial function with a composite score calculated by averaging z scores. Patients (76% female, mean age: 54.1 years) were assessed 8.7 months postinfection. Cognitive impairment, present in 49% of the sample, was not associated with QoL. In multiple linear regression, gender, fatigue, and psychological distress accounted for 42% of QoL variance, with fatigue and distress contributing 7% and 11%, respectively. Further studies are needed to determine if fatigue and psychological distress are causally related to QoL in long-COVID and could be treatment targets.

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Artemiadis, A., Tofarides, A. G., Liampas, A., Ioannou, C., Christodoulou, K., Louka, R., … Hadjigeorgiou, G. (2025). Factors associated with quality of life in long-COVID syndrome. International Journal of Rehabilitation Research, 48(1), 70–72. https://doi.org/10.1097/MRR.0000000000000654

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