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'Young adults with severe Covid equally at risk of organ damage'

'Young adults with severe Covid equally at risk of organ damage'

Young adults admitted to hospital with coronavirus are almost as likely to experience complications as those over 50, a recent study has suggested, dispelling suggestions that the virus presents no risk to younger healthy adults.

According to a research published in Lancet on Thursday (15), complications such as organ damage are high even in previously healthy patients aged under 50 who were admitted to hospital with Covid-19. The research was carried out by scientists at eight UK universities and the Department of Health and Social Care.


Based on the data of  73,197 adults of all ages across 302 UK hospitals in the first wave of Covid last year, the research stated that around half of all adult patients suffered at least one complication during their hospital stay. The most common was kidney damage, followed by lung and heart damage.

The highest rates were in those over 50 years old, with 51 per cent reporting at least one problem. But they were also "very common" in younger age groups. Some 37 per cent of 30 to 39 year olds and 44 per cent of 40 to 49 year olds had at least one complication.

Doctors are not yet certain how a severe Covid illness can cause organ damage, but it is thought in some cases the body's own immune system can spark an inflammatory response and injure healthy tissue.

The study, published in the medical journal the Lancet, found that those with pre-existing conditions were more likely to report complications but the risk was high even in young, previously healthy individuals.

Acute complications are also associated with reduced ability to self-care at discharge – with 13 per cent of 19-29 year olds and 17 per cent of 30-39 year olds unable to look after themselves once discharged from hospital, stated the study.

Although the study looked at cases before vaccines were widely available, and new variants of the virus had not arisen, the authors claim that their findings remain relevant in dispelling suggestions that the virus presents no risk to younger healthy adults, many of whom remain unvaccinated.

Prof Calum Semple, who led the research, said: The message is that this is not just a disease of the elderly and frail.”

"The data reinforces the fact that Covid is not flu and we are seeing even young adults coming into hospital suffering significant complications, some of which will require furthering monitoring and potentially further treatment in the future."

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Harshita Brella

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(photo: Northamptonshire Police)

Four police officers face misconduct charges in Harshita Brella murder case

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  • Four officers accused of misconduct over handling of Harshita Brella’s abuse reports.
  • Brella was found dead in a car boot in London last year; husband remains on the run.
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UK police watchdogs have ruled that four Northamptonshire Police officers should face misconduct proceedings over their handling of domestic abuse allegations made by Harshita Brella, the 24-year-old Indian woman later found murdered in London. Brella’s husband, Pankaj Lamba, remains the main suspect and is believed to have fled to India.

The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) said on Monday that its investigation found failings in how the force responded after Brella contacted police on August ( 29) last year to report abuse by Lamba at their home in Corby, Northamptonshire. She had moved to the UK only months earlier after marrying Lamba in an arranged marriage.

Lamba was arrested on 3 September ,2024 and released on police bail with conditions not to contact his wife. He was also issued with a Domestic Violence Protection Order. However, on November (14) last year, Brella’s body was discovered in the boot of a Vauxhall Corsa in Ilford, east London. Police believe she was strangled at their home days earlier, on the evening of November(10) before her body was driven to the capital.

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