Posted: 2023-02-20 04:08:45

The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) has told an inquiry into long COVID the current definition means some people are missing the opportunity to intervene and treat the post-viral illness early.

The federal parliamentary inquiry is looking into long COVID and repeated COVID infections and what the government could and should do to help prevent and support those who experience both.

One of the areas the inquiry is focused on is how to define long COVID given the symptoms, time line and severity can vary between patients.

Currently, Australia uses the World Health Organization's (WHO) definition of long COVID, which says it is when someone's symptoms continue or they develop new ones three months after their initial infection.

Mark Morgan, from the RACGP, said using this definition meant people who were experiencing "distressing" symptoms had to wait months to be diagnosed and receive treatment.

"If you wait to 12 weeks before you assign a label of long COVID then you've missed an opportunity to intervene earlier with the sort of strategies and rehabilitation that will work for a lot of people," he said.

"The symptoms beyond four weeks is where we start thinking, 'OK, could this person's distressing symptoms be linked to the COVID infection they had?''"

But he acknowledged that in the early period following COVID-19, it could be difficult to work out whether it was the infection or a different illness that was causing issues.

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