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Getting coronavirus could take as many as 13 years off your life, new research has claimed.

A research team from The University of Glasgow has looked at the long term impact on how long those affected by Covid-19 can expect to live for.

The study reports estimated years of life lost due to Covid-19, before and after adjustment for number and type of chronic conditions.

The researchers used information from Italy on the age at which people with Covid-19 died, and the number and type of chronic conditions they had.

The team then used World Health Organisation life tables as well as data from SAIL (Secure Anonymised Information Linkage), a large UK healthcare database, to estimate how long people with these characteristics might otherwise have been expected to live.

(Image: Alejandro Garcia/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

The team, led by Dr David McAllister, Wellcome Trust Intermediate Clinical Fellow at the Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow and Honorary Consultant in Public Health Medicine at Public Health Scotland, has analysed the estimated years of life lost due to Covid-19.

The University of Glasgow research team found that Years of Life Lost (YLL) was 13 and 11 years for men and women.

(Image: STEPHANIE LECOCQ/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

“As most people dying with Covid-19 are older with underlying chronic conditions, some have speculated that the impact of the condition may have been overstated, and that the actual number of years of life lost as a result of Covid-19 are relatively low,” said Dr McAllister.

“This new analysis found that death from Covid-19 results in over 10 years of life lost per person, even after taking account of the typical number and type of chronic conditions found in people dying of Covid-19.

(Image: CHRISTOPHE PETIT TESSON/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

"Among people dying of Covid-19, the number of years of life lost per person appear similar to diseases such as coronary heart disease.

"Information such as this is important to ensure governments and the public do not wrongly underestimate the effects of Covid-19 on individuals,” he added.

Their report, published in Wellcome Open Research but not yet peer-reviewed, states: “Among patients dying of Covid-19, there appears to be a considerable burden in terms of years of life lost (YLL), commensurate with diseases such as coronary heart disease or pneumonia.

"While media coverage of the pandemic has focused heavily on Covid-19 affecting people with ‘underlying health conditions’, adjustment for number and type of long-term conditions only modestly reduces the estimated years of life lost due to Covid-19 compared to estimates based only on age and sex.

"Public health agencies and governments should report on YLL, ideally adjusting for the presence of underlying long-term conditions, to allow the public and policy-makers to better understand the burden of this disease.”

The death toll from the new coronavirus in hospitals across the United Kingdom has risen to 19,506, an increase of 684 in 24 hours.

The country now has 143,464 confirmed cases of the virus, up 5,386 in a day.