The raw data showed that people who’d had COVID-19 had higher risks of being diagnosed with diabetes, high cholesterol and high blood pressure after their infections.
But when the researchers adjusted those numbers to account for the benchmark diagnosis, only the risk of diabetes remained significantly elevated. COVID-19 increased the odds of a new diabetes diagnosis by an average of about 58%.
Another strength of the study was that it included people who were diagnosed between March 2020 and June 2022, so it was able to estimate the risk even after the Omicron variant swept through the US. When the researchers parsed their data to distinguish between those who had been vaccinated against the coronavirus and those who weren’t, they found that the vaccinated had almost no increased risk of diabetes after COVID-19, but those were unvaccinated had nearly 80% higher odds of a new diabetes diagnosis. This difference was not statistically significant, however. Kwan says that if the researchers had had a little more data, the connection might be clearer.
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