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    Home»Health»Researchers Discover Surprising Risks for COVID-19 Infection + Significant Protection From Vitamin D
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    Researchers Discover Surprising Risks for COVID-19 Infection + Significant Protection From Vitamin D

    By Oxford University Press USAJanuary 9, 20233 Comments4 Mins Read
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    Young Protective Mask COVID 19
    In a new study, researchers identified that mask-wearing and using vitamin D decreased the risk of COVID-19 infection. They also found several characteristics – including male sex, lower age, blood group B, and larger household size – that increased the risk of infection.

    A new study explored the risk factors and protections against COVID-19 infection and severe illness.

    A new paper in Biology Methods & Protocols, published by Oxford University Press, investigated risk factors and protections against contracting COVID-19, and also for suffering from severe COVID. Researchers identified several characteristics – including male sex, lower age, blood group B, and larger household size – that increased the risk of infection and many other characteristics – including mask-wearing and using vitamin D – that decreased it. They also identified the things that increased or decreased the risk of a severe course of COVID-19. Some of these findings are unexpected.

    SARS-CoV-2 has infected more than 600 million people worldwide, resulting in 6.57 million confirmed deaths. But information about factors affecting the probability of infection or suffering from a  severe course of the disease remains insufficient and often speculative. Preregistered longitudinal studies about the risk factors of infection are surprisingly rare. Many factors such as contact with animals have been suggested only on a theoretical basis or discussed in non-scientific sources.

    Sociodemographic Influences on Infection and Severity

    Researchers here ran a study on 30 thousand internet users, recruiting participants using sites like Facebook and Twitter, in the Czech Republic who shared information about their exposure to 105 risk factors for COVID-19. Study participants indicated which potential risks and protective factors applied to them. These included health and demographic characteristics as well as information about behaviors, including keeping animals, taking vitamins and supplements, being actively engaged in sports, cold water swimming, frequent singing, marijuana use, tobacco smoking, living alone, walking in nature, and volunteering. 

    The study found that, expectedly, some sociodemographic factors had a moderate effect on the risks of COVID-19. People who live in larger cities and people with higher levels of education, especially women, had a lower risk of infection. Larger household sizes and the number of children under 20 years of age (in men), were associated with a higher risk of infection. People living on their own had a much lower risk of infection than those who share the household with someone else. Singles also reported a less severe course of COVID-19. Education level and (in women) also household size had the strongest protective effects against a severe or long course of COVID-19.

    Behavioral and Lifestyle Factors Affecting COVID-19 Risk

    Many predictable behaviors appeared to protect people against the infection, while three factors, namely being actively involved in sports, frequent singing, and cold-water swimming, increased the risk of infection. The most substantial protective factor against COVID-19 infection was strict adherence to mask-wearing. The second most substantial protective factor was the consumption of vitamins and supplements. This study found in particular that taking vitamin D provided significant protection against acquiring COVID-19.

    Adherence to social distancing and frequent handwashing had only a weak protective effect. This study also indicated that having type B blood increased the risk for COVID-19 infection. Having cats or dogs as pets did not affect the risk of infection and had a mostly insignificant positive effect on the risk of someone experiencing a severe course of the disease.

    The study here found that tobacco smoking and also marijuana use (in women) have a relatively strong protective effect against infection. The researchers found that marijuana use and tobacco smoking could also have some protective effects against a severe course of COVID-19. The protective effects of tobacco smoking against infection have been reported in previous studies. However, most studies show adverse effects of smoking on the risk of a severe course of COVID-19.

    The most unexpected result of the study was a positive correlation between higher severity of the course of COVID-19 and adherence to wearing masks and respirators and, to a lesser extent, keeping social distance. The investigators speculate this is because people predisposed to a severe course of COVID-19 (those who are overweight, suffer from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or have diabetes) tried hard to avoid infection and more strictly adhered to public health recommendations about masks and social distancing. But when they did become infected, they often had a more severe course of the disease due to their underlying health problems.

    Reference: “The effects of 105 biological, socioeconomic, behavioral, and environmental factors on the risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection and a severe course of COVID-19: a prospective, explorative cohort study” by Jaroslav Flegr, Pavel Flegr and Lenka Příplatová, 15 December 2022, Biology Methods and Protocols.
    DOI: 10.1093/biomethods/bpac030

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    3 Comments

    1. Paul Dodd on January 9, 2023 8:03 am

      The headline “Significant Protection From Vitamin D” is misleading, should be “Significant Protection by Vitamin D”
      e.g. “protection from lions” does not mean “protection by lions”.

      Reply
      • Hottan Fevred on January 9, 2023 11:27 am

        Yeah that was funny. I looked at the headline then the stock photo with the guy pointing to his facemask, and guessed yeah he was partly protected from vitamin D in the sunshine.

        On the other hand, when I wore my facemask I was barely attacked by lions.

        It is nice to see the Vitamin D / Covid hypothesis evidenced further. They said it improved with supplementation, not just higher blood serum vitamin D levels, so it points to a causation, not just higher vitamin D in healthier people. The idea was demonized during the pandemic, but I thought it sounded plausible to likely, yet we just didn’t know.

        Reply
    2. roman on January 17, 2023 11:25 am

      Prolonged face masking leads to increased haemoglobin mass which is the most important oxygen-carrying protein, is involved in the regulation of innate immune responses. So telling that masks work in stopping the infection is quite a bad lie. Obesity was the biggest risk factor since it causes vitamin D deficiency and obesity immunosuppression but we locked down the gyms. And there are studies now showing that elderly who were physically active had no issue with covid which is a common cold virus like all coronaviruses. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8152240/

      Wearing mask is bad for your immune system , so how does it protect from covid infection ? xD

      Not to mention the intermittent hypoxia which disturbs the blood-brain barrier.

      Now we have immunity debt after face masking and excess of deaths as a result of shutting down healthcare during lockdown. XD

      Trust the science they sad but nobody was reading the science.

      Reply
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