“Long COVID”: The First Illness in History Named by Patients
Mari Shiozaki
Abstract
The COVID‑19 pandemic created a large population of individuals who continued to experience debilitating symptoms long after the acute infection had resolved. This chapter examines the emergence of Long COVID as both a biomedical condition and a patient‑defined illness category, illustrating how individuals with persistent symptoms challenged clinical assumptions tied to observable pathology.
Fatigue, cognitive impairment, autonomic dysfunction, and multisystem complaints often appeared despite normal test results, positioning Long COVID within a broader history of contested conditions such as ME/CFS. Patients frequently encountered dismissal or psychological attribution, experiences many described as medical gaslighting.
Digital communities became central in documenting symptoms, producing patient‑led research, and naming the condition “Long COVID,” a term later adopted by health institutions alongside biomedical labels such as PASC. By integrating patient narratives with emerging clinical and neurobiological evidence, advocacy reshaped public discourse and compelled agencies to develop guidelines, clinics, and research programs.
Ultimately, Long COVID exposes the limits of traditional diagnostic paradigms and underscores the need for interdisciplinary, patient-centered models of care that bridge biomedical science and social context. It offers critical lessons for how illness is recognized, contested, and legitimized in contemporary society.
Web | DOI | IntechOpen | Peer-reviewed book chapter | Open Access
Mari Shiozaki
Abstract
The COVID‑19 pandemic created a large population of individuals who continued to experience debilitating symptoms long after the acute infection had resolved. This chapter examines the emergence of Long COVID as both a biomedical condition and a patient‑defined illness category, illustrating how individuals with persistent symptoms challenged clinical assumptions tied to observable pathology.
Fatigue, cognitive impairment, autonomic dysfunction, and multisystem complaints often appeared despite normal test results, positioning Long COVID within a broader history of contested conditions such as ME/CFS. Patients frequently encountered dismissal or psychological attribution, experiences many described as medical gaslighting.
Digital communities became central in documenting symptoms, producing patient‑led research, and naming the condition “Long COVID,” a term later adopted by health institutions alongside biomedical labels such as PASC. By integrating patient narratives with emerging clinical and neurobiological evidence, advocacy reshaped public discourse and compelled agencies to develop guidelines, clinics, and research programs.
Ultimately, Long COVID exposes the limits of traditional diagnostic paradigms and underscores the need for interdisciplinary, patient-centered models of care that bridge biomedical science and social context. It offers critical lessons for how illness is recognized, contested, and legitimized in contemporary society.
Web | DOI | IntechOpen | Peer-reviewed book chapter | Open Access