Nightsong
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
A call from patient-researchers to advance research on long COVID
Abstract
Long COVID is a chronic and often disabling illness with long-term consequences. Although progress has been made in the clinical characterization of long COVID, no approved treatments exist and disconnects between patients and researchers threaten to hinder future progress. Incorporating patients as active collaborators in long COVID research can bridge the gap and accelerate progress toward treatments and cures.
Link | PDF (Cell, October 2024)
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Abstract
Long COVID is a chronic and often disabling illness with long-term consequences. Although progress has been made in the clinical characterization of long COVID, no approved treatments exist and disconnects between patients and researchers threaten to hinder future progress. Incorporating patients as active collaborators in long COVID research can bridge the gap and accelerate progress toward treatments and cures.
Link | PDF (Cell, October 2024)
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As patient-researchers, we have also had to spend considerable time and resources refuting the framing of long COVID as psychological, psychosomatic or due to deconditioning. These framings alienate patients and allocate precious limited resources to dead-end hypotheses rather than evidence-backed scientific trials.
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and graded exercise therapy (GET) have historically been implemented in combination in attempts to treat ME based on the hypothesis that the etiology of ME is principally psychological and symptoms are due to deconditioning. However, considerable evidence has shown that GET and CBT either individually or in combination do not improve symptoms of ME; indeed, these treatments can actually cause direct harm to patients through exacerbation of PEM