Arcadia (arcadia.io), the leading population health management and health intelligence platform, today released findings of its study published on medRxiv showing that current vaccines reduce the risk of long-COVID, even when administered up to 12 weeks after a COVID diagnosis.
BOSTON, Dec. 15, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Arcadia (arcadia.io), the leading population health management and health intelligence platform, today released findings of its study published on medRxiv showing that current vaccines reduce the risk of long-COVID, even when administered up to 12 weeks after a COVID diagnosis. Developed in collaboration with the COVID-19 Patient Recovery Alliance, these findings indicate:
The analysis was performed using Arcadia’s aggregated, de-identified longitudinal patient data asset, which represents the health history of more than 150 million patient identities from thousands of EHR and claims data feeds all over the United States. The long-COVID analysis, based on COVID-19 infection and vaccination data over a period of 15 months (from February 2020 to May 2021), included 1.06 million persons infected with COVID-19, of which more than 240,000 had available a complete longitudinal history prior to the pandemic as well as at least one encounter with a healthcare provider at least eight weeks after their COVID-19 diagnosis. “The persistence or emergence of symptoms after an acute infection (i.e., long-COVID) affects as many as one-quarter of all who have been infected by COVID-19, and in many, symptoms can last for months and be debilitating,” said Brett Giroir, MD, Visiting Distinguished Executive at Leavitt Partners and former Member of the White House Coronavirus Task Force. “Arcadia’s data add significantly to the compelling advantages of COVID-19 vaccination. In addition, the unexpected protective effect of vaccination even after infection suggests the presence of biological mechanisms for the development of long-COVID that were previously unsuspected and yet uninvestigated.” “The reduced likelihood of long-COVID symptoms observed in our study provides a rationale for vaccination sooner rather than later, achieving improved patient health outcomes related to long-COVID,” said Richard Parker, MD, Chief Medical Officer at Arcadia. “From a clinical perspective, it answers a question many doctors have been asking as to whether or not to defer vaccinating infected patients until they have recovered from the acute illness. Based on the evidence, an unvaccinated person infected with COVID would benefit from immediate vaccination much like patients with rabies and Hepatitis B benefit from those vaccines.” “This study represents an additional application of the HIPAA-compliant, HITRUST- and NCQA- certified Arcadia Analytics platform which continuously aggregates and curates high-quality, up-to-date population health data assets, and provides actionable insights to improve healthcare quality, access, and cost-effectiveness,” said Michael Simon, Director of Data Science at Arcadia. “Our company’s mission is to support providers, health plans, and life science innovators with novel insights that can only be obtained by analyzing data on a massive scale.” This study is a part of an ongoing research collaboration with the COVID-19 Patient Recovery Alliance, a partnership of healthcare organizations convened by Gov. Michael O. Leavitt and Nancy-Ann DeParle to coordinate efforts to support patients experiencing long-COVID. Common symptoms of long-COVID include fatigue, cough, shortness of breath, muscle and joint pain, chest pain, loss of taste and smell, difficulties in thinking or concentrating (“brain fog”), depression, anxiety, and abnormal sleep patterns. Of note, these symptoms can occur even in people who had mild symptoms of COVID-19. Full details on the findings can be found on medRxiv. About the Study About Arcadia About Leavitt Partners, an HMA Company About the Leavitt Partners COVID Patient Recovery Alliance Media Contact
SOURCE Arcadia.io |