Some COVID-19 symptoms could be anxiety driven, show hearing scientists

Coronavirus (Public domain Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Pub
Coronavirus (Public domain Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Public Health Image Library)
Coronavirus (Public domain Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Public Health Image Library) - Reports of symptoms such as tinnitus and hearing loss during the coronavirus pandemic could in part have a psychosocial origin rather than being directly linked to COVID-19 or the SARS-CoV2 virus. The University of Manchester , and the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Manchester Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) study, published in Frontiers of Public Health today (22/2/22), shows that symptoms - which by definition are not measurable - are a fertile ground for misinterpretation. Funding was received from Manchester BRC, the Royal National Institute for Deaf People (RNID) , the British Tinnitus Association and Neuromod Devices Limited. Reports of associations between COVID-19 and auditory symptoms such as hearing difficulty and tinnitus have been widely discussed in the media and academia. However, most studies have relied on self-reporting and lacked baseline information from before the pandemic. That makes it difficult to know whether symptoms occurred because the COVID-19 virus affected the ear itself, or whether they occurred because of psychosocial factors like living through a pandemic, fears about what the virus might do, or recall bias. In a YouGov poll in 2019 of over 10,000 people, Professor Chris Armitage, Chair in Health Psychology at the University of Manchester, and Manchester BRC Hearing Health, Optimising Outcomes Programme Lead, asked, among other things, whether people had hearing difficulty and/or tinnitus.
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