A long haul with long COVID-19
UC expert shares why poor, middle income Americans appear to be hit hardest
An array of symptoms, including fatigue, breathing problems and debilitating pain, have come to be known as “long COVID-19".
The condition can affect anyone, but a growing body of evidence suggests those in the low- and middle-income brackets are more likely to develop long COVID, to suffer longer with its symptoms and to endure job loss, eviction and other serious consequences because of it.
That's according to recent Yahoo! News reporting, which originally appeared in the Cincinnati Enquirer.
Both the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. Census survey last year made a similar connection that the poorer the household, the greater the chance it was home to a long COVID sufferer.
The reason for the disparity is unclear. But physicians, activists and public health leaders suspect lower income people suffer more from long COVID for the same reason they suffer more from heart disease, diabetes and other health concerns. They have less access to what contributes to good health, from quality medical care and insurance to healthy food and affordable housing.
When the pandemic began, many public health leaders predicted those with less would suffer most.
“That’s exactly the way it played out,” said Richard Becker, MD, the physician who leads the University of Cincinnati’s long COVID clinic. He also serves as director of the UC Heart, Lung and Vascular Institute and an internal medicine professor in the UC College of Medicine.
While COVID is caused by a virus, the cause of long COVID symptoms that linger after the virus is gone is more mysterious.
Featured image at top: Illustration of coronavirus. Photo/istock/peterschreiber.media.
Related Stories
UC launches Bearcats Affordability Grant
January 7, 2026
The University of Cincinnati is making college more attainable for students across Ohio with the creation of the Bearcats Affordability Grant. The new grant will provide a pathway to tuition-free college for students of families who make less than $75,000 per year. Beginning in fall 2026, the Bearcats Affordability Grant will cover the remaining cost of tuition for Ohio residents who are Pell eligible.
BearcatGPT AI platform now available to all UC faculty and staff
December 9, 2025
University of Cincinnati Digital Technology Solutions is excited to announce that BearcatGPT, the university’s private, secure AI platform, is now available to all UC faculty and staff.
‘Designer drug’ shows early neuroprotective signal in acute ischemic stroke
October 28, 2025
Medscape highlighted new trial results led by the University of Cincinnati's Eva Mistry that found an experimental drug shows promise in protecting injured brain cells for patients with acute ischemic stroke.