Disability Doubles Long COVID Risk, New Study Reveals
Author: University of Kansas
Published: 2024/09/03 - Updated: 2026/01/08
Publication Details: Peer-Reviewed, Survey, Analysis
Category Topic: Statistics - Related Publications
Page Content: Synopsis - Introduction - Main - Insights, Updates
Synopsis: This research represents a peer-reviewed scholarly study published in the American Journal of Public Health that examines long COVID prevalence among people with pre-existing disabilities. Conducted by the University of Kansas Institute for Health and Disability Policy Studies in collaboration with the Patient-Led Research Collaborative, the study analyzed data from the 2022 National Survey on Health and Disability alongside CDC's Household Pulse Survey. The findings matter because they fill a critical gap in pandemic research-most studies only asked about disabilities at the time of the survey rather than tracking people who had disabilities before contracting COVID-19.
The data reveals that individuals with chronic illnesses face the highest risk, with 60% developing long COVID after infection, while those with mental health conditions showed 45% prevalence. These statistics become particularly concerning when layered with existing healthcare barriers this population already faces, including transportation challenges, cost obstacles, and difficulty accessing medical care. For people with disabilities, older adults, and those managing chronic conditions, this research provides evidence-based validation of their experiences and highlights the ongoing need for protective measures like masking in healthcare settings, where many providers have abandoned precautions despite the continued risk - Disabled World (DW).
Introduction
The COVID-19 pandemic has been especially hard on individuals with disabilities. New research from the University of Kansas shows that this population is also experiencing long COVID at significantly higher rates than the general population, which exacerbates existing barriers to accessing care.
Main Content
Researchers from KU's Institute for Health and Disability Policy Studies at the KU Life Span Institute and the Patient-Led Research Collaborative published a study showing that more than 40% of individuals with pre-existing disabilities who had tested positive for COVID-19 experienced long COVID, defined as symptoms lasting three months or longer. This rate is more than twice the 18.9% of individuals without disabilities who contracted COVID and experienced long COVID symptoms.
Research has long documented that individuals with disabilities face barriers to health care access and experience poorer health outcomes than their nondisabled peers. However, many studies during the pandemic have only asked about disabilities present at the time of the survey rather than whether individuals had a disability prior to the start of the pandemic. The research team compared data from the 2022 National Survey on Health and Disability, conducted by the IHDPS, to the Household Pulse Survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
"We know many people who experience long COVID go on to develop a disability, but we wanted to know more about how it affected those with disabilities before developing long COVID," said Noelle Kurth, research associate at KU's IHDPS.
The study was conducted by Jean Hall, director of KU's Institute for Health and Disability Policy Studies at the KU Life Span Institute; Noelle Kurth and Kelsey Goddard, research associates at the institute; and Lisa McCorkell, co-founder of Patient-Led Research Collaborative, and was published in the American Journal of Public Health.
The survey examined the types of disabilities self-reported by participants and found that those with chronic illnesses or diseases were the most likely to also experience long COVID, with 60% of those testing positive for COVID developing long COVID. Mental illness/psychiatric disabilities were next at 45%, while sensory disabilities, such as blindness or deafness, had the lowest prevalence of long COVID among types of disability.
"We knew from previous research during the pandemic that people with pre-existing disabilities were having more difficulties getting the vaccines and were more likely to be exposed," Hall said. "So, we knew there were risk factors for COVID-19, but now we also know this demographic is more likely to experience long COVID. They not only have higher rates of long COVID, but they also have greater barriers to care, whether it's transportation, costs or other challenges. That's something we really want people to know."
The findings suggest that public health policy should pay closer attention to the prevalence of long COVID and prioritize the needs of individuals with disabilities to create equitable policies and responses. The authors argue that the risks for long COVID among people with disabilities need to be better understood, as they are more likely to face treatment refusals, develop severe symptoms, be hospitalized or experience long COVID. Further, the public, health care system and policymakers alike should acknowledge that the pandemic is not over and continues to pose greater risks to this already at-risk demographic.
"We read comments from survey participants with pre-existing disabilities who are afraid to go out in their communities because the people they need to interact with, including health providers, aren't masking, and the public in general acts like the pandemic is over," Goddard said, and "re-contracting COVID can exacerbate their long COVID symptoms."
McCorkell, co-founder of the Patient-Led Research Collaborative, and person with long COVID and disability herself, emphasized the need for policies that address current inequities and consider how future pandemics may affect people with disabilities.
"The pandemic is not over, and COVID is still spreading. Policy should be adjusted so that if we're truly aiming for an equitable response, we implement masking in public places and health care facilities to protect people with disabilities," McCorkell said. "With low rates of providers taking precautions and knowing how to support people with disabilities, along with the access challenges anyone faces with long COVID, it's tough out there. Moving forward, we need to focus services and support to people who need them the most."
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Insights, Analysis, and Developments
Editorial Note: The implications of this research extend far beyond statistics. When more than four in ten people with disabilities who contract COVID develop long-term complications, we're looking at a healthcare crisis that compounds existing inequities. The study's most troubling revelation isn't just the numbers-it's the reality that people with disabilities report feeling unsafe in their own communities because basic protective measures have been abandoned. As survey participants noted, they fear reinfection because each exposure can worsen their symptoms, yet they're forced to navigate a world where even healthcare providers have stopped masking. This creates an impossible situation where the very people most vulnerable to severe outcomes must either isolate themselves indefinitely or risk their health to access basic services. Moving forward, public health policy must recognize that declaring a pandemic "over" doesn't make it so for populations who continue to face disproportionate risk, and equitable pandemic response requires sustained protective measures in healthcare settings and public spaces where vulnerable individuals cannot opt out of exposure - Disabled World (DW).Attribution/Source(s): This peer reviewed publication was selected for publishing by the editors of Disabled World (DW) due to its relevance to the disability community. Originally authored by University of Kansas and published on 2024/09/03, this content may have been edited for style, clarity, or brevity.