Back to home

Science | Europe

Why Long COVID Is Still Destroying Lives and Medicine Has No Answers

2026-04-02| 2 min read| EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk
Story Focus

65 million people globally have long COVID. Four years after COVID-19 first appeared, medicine still has no approved treatments. Here is why this condition is so hard to study and what research is finding.

65 million people globally have long COVID. Four years after COVID-19 first appeared, medicine still has no approved treatments. Here is why this condition is so hard to study and what research is finding.

Key points
  • 65 million people globally have long COVID.
  • Long COVID — the persistence of debilitating symptoms including fatigue, cognitive dysfunction ('brain fog'), breathlessness, and pain beyond the acute infection phase, in patients who have otherwise recovered from COVID...
  • Four years after COVID-19 first circulated, medicine does not have a single FDA-approved treatment specifically for long COVID.
Timeline
2026-04-02: Long COVID — the persistence of debilitating symptoms including fatigue, cognitive dysfunction ('brain fog'), breathlessness, and pain beyond the acute infection phase, in patients who have otherwise recovered from COVID...
Current context: Four years after COVID-19 first circulated, medicine does not have a single FDA-approved treatment specifically for long COVID.
What to watch: For the political and healthcare system dimension: long COVID predominantly affects women (approximately 75 percent of the severely affected), people of working age, and people without pre-existing conditions whose disab...
Why it matters

65 million people globally have long COVID.

Long COVID — the persistence of debilitating symptoms including fatigue, cognitive dysfunction ('brain fog'), breathlessness, and pain beyond the acute infection phase, in patients who have otherwise recovered from COVID-19 — affects an estimated 65 million people globally according to 2023 WHO estimates. For the most severely affected, the condition is as disabling as multiple sclerosis or heart failure, preventing work, disrupting relationships, and eliminating the activities that defined the person's pre-illness identity.

Four years after COVID-19 first circulated, medicine does not have a single FDA-approved treatment specifically for long COVID. This is not for lack of research effort — the NIH's RECOVER initiative, the UK's PHOSP-COVID programme, and dozens of independent research groups have investigated long COVID's mechanisms and potential treatments extensively. The absence of approved treatments reflects the genuine complexity of a condition that appears to have multiple underlying mechanisms in different patient subgroups.

The current mechanistic understanding identifies at least three pathological processes that contribute to long COVID in various proportions across affected individuals: viral persistence (fragments of SARS-CoV-2 RNA and protein found in tissues months after acute infection, suggesting the virus isn't fully cleared); immune dysregulation (altered T-cell function, elevated inflammatory cytokines, reactivation of latent viruses like Epstein-Barr virus that the immune system normally keeps dormant); and microbiome disruption (lasting changes in gut and potentially lung microbiome composition that alter immune function and metabolic processes).

The specific treatments showing promise in early phase trials: low-dose naltrexone (an opioid antagonist whose immunomodulatory effects at low doses may reduce the neuroinflammation contributing to brain fog); antivirals targeting persistent viral reservoirs; and specific probiotic protocols targeting the gut microbiome dysbiosis patterns seen in long COVID patients.

For the political and healthcare system dimension: long COVID predominantly affects women (approximately 75 percent of the severely affected), people of working age, and people without pre-existing conditions whose disability was unexpected. The systemic under-recognition of medically unexplained fatigue conditions — long COVID's similarities to myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) whose existence was dismissed by much of the medical establishment for decades — is creating specific research and treatment access barriers.

#long-covid#ME/CFS#fatigue#research#pandemic#treatment

Comments

0 comments
Checking account...
480 characters left
Loading comments...

Related coverage

Science
The Invisible Pandemic of Chronic Pain — And Why Medicine Has Given Up on 1.5 Billion People
1.5 billion people worldwide live with chronic pain. Most are undertreated or untreated. Here is the systemic failure be...
Science
The DNA Cancer Connection Is More Dynamic Than Thought — Here Is the Treatment Implication
DNA's constant movement controls gene expression and cancer development. This discovery points toward a new class of can...
Science
Why the Next Pandemic Will Spread Faster Than COVID — and What We're Not Ready For
Epidemiologists warn the next pandemic pathogen could spread faster than COVID-19 did. Here is the specific surveillance...
Science
How the Gut Controls Your Immune System — The 2026 Research That Changes Medicine
Emerging research shows the gut microbiome trains and regulates the immune system from birth. Here is why this understan...
Science
The Most Effective Method for Quitting Smoking That Almost Nobody Uses
Varenicline (Champix) has the highest smoking cessation success rate of any approach but is rarely the first thing offer...
Science
The Dementia Prevention Study That Proves 40% of Cases Are Avoidable
A major Lancet Commission update found 40% of dementia cases are preventable through 14 modifiable risk factors. Here is...

More stories

World
What April 2026 Revealed About What It Means to Be a Human Being Right Now
Science
The Lab-Grown Meat That Is Finally Reaching Restaurant Menus
Science
The Simple Hack for Learning Anything Faster That Neuroscience Actually Backs
Science
The Ocean Heat Record That Scientists Say Changes Everything
Science
The Nutrition Science That Finally Explains Why Some People Can Eat Anything and Stay Thin
Science
What Happens to Your Body When You Stop Drinking Alcohol for 30 Days
Science
Why Your Brain Is Better After Exercise — The Neuroscience Nobody Taught You
Science
The Carbon Budget Has Almost Run Out — Here Is What That Actually Means
Science
The Real Cost of Ultra-Processed Food — The Study That Ends the Debate
Sports
How 2026's Most Surprising Sport Is Growing Faster Than Football
World
The Anti-Social Media Law That's Actually Working
Science
The Specific Mental Health Benefits of Being in Nature — and Why Cities Are Building More of It