MDOI International Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies and Innovative Researchs 110.0184/INT.2026.00159
110.0184/INT.2026.00159
Article

Postacute Sequelae From SARS-CoV-2 at the University of Illinois Hospital and Clinics: An Examination of the Effects of Long COVID in an Underserved Population Utilizing Manual Extraction of Electronic Health Records

John Musachia , Jon Radosta , Dirin Ukwade , Shahrukh Rizvi , Romani Wahba 2024 International Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies and Innovative Researchs

Abstract

Background Although there has been a steady decrease in morbidity and mortality from the SARS-CoV-2 virus since the 2020-2021 period, thousands of Americans are still infected with the virus daily. Some proportion of these infected individuals will go on to develop postacute sequelae from SARS-CoV-2 (PASC, or Long COVID), manifesting symptoms 4 weeks or more after recovery from COVID-19. PASC and its underlying pathophysiology are still poorly described and understood. Although hundreds of peer-reviewed, published investigations on Long COVID exist, few have focused on underserved urban patient populations. Most of the published research has involved reviews of diagnostic codes from electronic health records, or responses to questionnaires. Methods We sought to review Long COVID in an underserved population in Chicago, and to go beyond electronic health record reviews of diagnostic codes, utilizing in-depth chart reviews, gleaned via manual extraction, focusing on notations of care providers. We investigated which specific preexisting conditions, if any, might be associated with specific Long COVID symptomatology's, and if any preexisting conditions predicted Long COVID. Study participants included 204 Long COVID patients, 98 COVID-19–positive patients, and 104 healthy (no history of COVID-19 infection) patients from an inner-city health system caring for underserved communities, whose records were reviewed via manual data extraction from electronic health records, focusing on provider notes in patient charts. Results Our Long COVID symptom frequencies were distinct compared to frequencies from other reviews that did not focus on underserved populations and done with medical records when only diagnostic codes are utilized. Preexisting medical conditions did not predict similar Long COVID symptomologies, save for the significant association between preexisting cough/dyspnea/pulmonary conditions and preexisting migraine/headache and their analogous Long COVID symptoms. Conclusions The odds of having Long COVID increased comparatively in subjects hospitalized with COVID-19, subjects with BMI >30, and female subjects.

Identifier Metadata

Identifier 110.0184/INT.2026.00159
Canonical mdoi:110.0184/INT.2026.00159
Resolver URL https://mdoi.org/110.0184/INT.2026.00159
Resource URL Open resource
Document URL Open document
Content Type Article
Authors John Musachia , Jon Radosta , Dirin Ukwade , Shahrukh Rizvi , Romani Wahba
Year 2024
Depositor International Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies and Innovative Researchs Organisation
Prefix 110.0184
Registered June 17, 2026
Updated June 17, 2026
Status Active
Visibility Public

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