Data analysis reveals the staggering financial impact of long COVID across the American healthcare landscape. The projected $8 billion three-year cost represents a significant strain on already overburdened systems, with healthcare services accounting for $3.6 billion of direct expenses. However, the most alarming finding concerns workforce productivity losses, which contribute nearly $1.8 billion—representing approximately 40% of the total economic burden. Disability support accounts for an additional $1.4 billion. These figures underscore that long COVID’s financial impact extends well beyond hospital beds and treatment protocols. The substantial workforce losses indicate widespread patient disability and reduced economic participation, affecting employers, families, and broader economic productivity. Understanding this cost distribution is critical for policymakers and healthcare administrators prioritizing resource allocation and intervention strategies.
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