‘Oku taupotu ‘i lalo ha fakamatala fakaTonga
A misleading post on Instagram (direct link, archive link) shows a collage that features NFL player Damar Hamlin, Dr. Anthony Fauci and a stormtrooper from Star Wars.
“The COVID shots speeds (sic) up the aging process within the human body,” reads text included in the post.
“Therefore, those who are fully vaccinated, will age faster than those who are not vaccinated and possess age related diseases way before their time.”
There is no evidence the COVID-19 vaccines speed up the aging process, an expert told USA TODAY. The same can’t be said for the virus it helps prevent, however: Some researchers have found links between severe cases of COVID-19 and signs of accelerated aging.
Dr. Stuart Ray, a professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, said there is no evidence COVID-19 vaccines cause accelerated aging.
“On the contrary, they reduce the risk of severe COVID-19,” Ray said in an email to USA TODAY. “To the extent that severe COVID-19 is associated with accelerated aging, the COVID-19 vaccines would be expected to reduce that risk.”
There is no avoiding chronological aging, Ray said, but aging can also be viewed as a process of deterioration that involves accumulating injuries and being at a higher risk for age-related diseases. Diseases or other ailments that happen more often with age can be associated with specific characteristics, such as gene expression, and deemed aging-related, Ray said
“If they develop rapidly, they might be called accelerated aging, though such terminology is imprecise since aging is not a uniform process biologically,” he said.
There are multiple studies that show links between severe cases of COVID-19 and accelerated aging. A 2022 study by scientists at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, for example, found “patients with severe COVID-19 exhibit a drop in cognitive performance that mimics accelerated aging,” The Harvard Gazette reported.
āOurs is the first study to show that COVID-19 is associated with the molecular signatures of brain aging,ā Maria Mavrikaki, a Harvard Medical School pathology instructor and one of the study’s authors, told The Harvard Gazette. āWe found striking similarities between the brains of patients with COVID-19 and aged individuals.ā
A 2022 study published in Advanced Biomedical Research, a peer-reviewed online journal, suggests a consequence of the pandemic will be more people experiencing medical issues similar to problems common with old age.
“Based on the available evidence, our hypothesis is that the (COVID-19) pandemic and its long-term complications will lead to premature aging ā in terms of health ā of many people in the world,” the study says.
Another 2022 study published in Nature Communications, a scientific journal, found COVID-19 could accelerate epigenetic aging, which shows the “true age that our cells, tissues and organ systems appear to be, based on biochemistry,” according to the National Institute on Aging.
The COVID-19 vaccines lower the risk of developing a severe illness, “saving millions of lives and preventing many of the complications of severe COVID-19 disease,” Ray said.
USA TODAY reached out to the social media user who shared the post for comment but did not immediately receive a response.
Our fact-check sources:
- Stuart Ray, May 8, Email exchange with USA TODAY
- Nature Communications, April 19, 2022, Accelerated biological aging in COVID-19 patients
- Advanced Biomedical Research, Nov. 28, 2022, Does COVID-19 Escalate Aging Process? A Possible Concern
- Nature Aging, Dec. 5, 2022, Severe COVID-19 is associated with molecular signatures of aging in the human brain
- The Harvard Gazette, Dec. 6, 2022, Severe COVID-19 linked with brain aging
- Healthline, accessed May 15, Chronological Aging and Biological Aging
- National Human Genome Research Institute, accessed May 15, Gene Expression
- National Institute on Aging, March 26, 2021, The epigenetics of aging: What the bodyās hands of time tell us
FAKAMATALA FAKATONGA
āOku āikai ke moāoni āa e fakamatala kuo tufaki he āinistakalami āo pehe ai āoku fakavaveāi āe he huhu maluāi Koviti āa e āalu ke motuāa angeā. āOku āikai ha fakamoāoni fakasaienisi ki ai.
Meāa tatau pe ki he tuakuakiāi āo pehe āoku hanga āe he vailasi āo taāofi āa e āalu ke motuāa ange, neongo ia āoku āi ai āa e ngaahi keisi lalahi āo e Koviti-19 kuo āilo ai āe ha kau fakatotolo āoku āi ai āene fakauāaki mo e fakaāilonga āo e vave ange ke holo ke motuāa āa e faāahinga kuo puke ko iaā.
Naāe pehÄ āe PalÅfesa Dr Stuart mei he akoāanga fakafaitoāo Johns Hopkins School of Medicine āoku halaāatÄ ha fakamoāoni āoku hanga āe he huhu maluāi āo fakavaveāi e āalu ke motuāa ange.
Ko e meāa pe āoku fai āe he faitoāo huhu maluāi ko hono fakasiāisiāi āa e fakatuāutÄmaki ange āa e Koviti 19.
Oku malava pe ia ke vave āa e holo ke motuāa ange tuāunga he to lalao āi ha āi ai ha lavea lahi pe tuāu fakatuāutamaki āi ha maāu ha ngaahi mahaki fakatupu motuāa vave ange. Kau ai āa e faāahinga āulungaanga pau, hange ko e gene expression, pea lau ia āoku nau fekauāaki mo e āalu ke motuāa vave ange.
Kapau āe vave āene maāu āo kakakaka ai pea āe lava ke lau ia āoku ne fakavaveāi āa e āalu ke motuāa ange. Kuo iai a e ngaahi sitati āoku āasi ai āa e fekauāaki āa e Koviti 19 mo e āalu ke motuāa ange
I ha fakatotolo i he 2022 ne fakahoko āe he saienitisi mei he Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, ne ilo ai āa e kau mahaki ne fuāu lahi āa e Koviti 19 ia kinautolu. Pea ne āi ai āa e holo āi heāenau tuāunga fakaefakakaukau.
Iai mo e fakatotolo ki ai āa e Harvard Medical School o pehe āoku āi ai e felaveāi āa e ngaahi uesia āo kinautolu ki he āuto āa kinautolu oku maāu kovia āe he Koviti. Kau pe ai mo e popula āa e āatamai he faingataāa āoku āomeia āe he Koviti āa e āalu ke vave ange āa e motuāa.