A/Prof in computational statistics at Toronto.
The survey’s results mean that over 18 million adult Americans are currently experiencing symptoms of long COVID and 15 million have problems performing daily activities because of it.
Of the nearly 24 million adults in the U.S. who currently have long COVID, more than 80% are having some trouble carrying out daily activities, according to CDC data released Wednesday.
Why it matters: Nearly three years into a pandemic that has left millions newly disabled, medical researchers continue to search for an effective treatment.
The big picture: Long COVID symptoms can include shortness of breath, cognitive difficulties and symptoms that worsen even with minimal physical or mental effort — a primary indicator of chronic fatigue syndrome.
- The pandemic sharpened the focus on the once largely dismissed area of chronic fatigue in health care, but misunderstandings and stigma persist.
- Up to 4 million people are estimated to be out of work because of long COVID symptoms, according to a Brookings Institute report in August.
- While long COVID is classified as a disability, qualifying for Social Security benefits requires proof that the condition has or will last a year, even though there's no test to diagnose long COVID, per CDC.
Mentions "chronic fatigue syndrome" (not ME/CFS) and then uses "chronic fatigue" just a few lines later
The first big picture sentence is pretty decent: they got PEM in there - yay. I might be inclined to give them a pass on the later point, ie allowing that chronic-fatigue-the-symptom, whether from ME or lupus, Sjogrens, MS or whatever, has been largely misunderstood and mismanaged.
A/Prof in computational statistics at Toronto.
Unprecedented numbers of shows being cancelled. Presumably a mix of long Covid, acute Covid and +/-post-Covid-augmented other infections.
He emphasizes that Covid causes unambiguously physical issues, such as diabetes in children and teens, heart problems and strokes in middle age, and Alzheimer's Disease in older people.News anchor Chris Cuomo: "First, the simple reality. Is there any chance that long Covid is just some mushy excuse for people wanting to say that they have bad things and phantom illnesses?"
Doctor William Li: "Absolutely not. I mean, Covid is a new human disease."
Dr. Li: "What's happening now is that doctors are getting into the game, and we now have to confront the fact that there are a certain percentage, less than half, but certainly not rare, people that have a spectrum of conditions, and I actually take care of people that are seriously debilitated. Their lives--they say that their lives are actually ruined. And so, for me, as a researcher, I'm interested in finding out what is going on underneath, how can we predict who's actually at risk for developing it, and of course, what do we do to try to help people overcome the suffering?
A nice readA doctor’s humbling journey treating long Covid
Unfortunately way too many people with this are not being believed about their illness. And this has happened before, with long Lyme, and CFS, and fibromyalgia. And I will tell you, as a medical insider, that I used to think that those weren’t real. I was taught in medical school that they weren’t real. I was just with some medical students last week, and I talked to them about a patient of mine who had long Lyme. And they said we were taught that that’s not real — and these are current med students. This is something the ivory tower medical profession needs to realize — long Covid is going to push us to get outside of our comfort zone with illnesses that we can’t define. Because we don’t like it when we can’t understand something, but we have to get over that.
So, I’m 58 years old. You know, an old doctor. And if you had told me two years ago that I was going on social media and Twitter, I would have said, “You’re crazy. There’s no way.” But two things happened. One was that at the beginning of the pandemic, a lot of doctors around the world were writing me and saying, there’s so much ICU delirium, we’ve got to study this. And they said if you get on Twitter, we can find the patients faster. I said fine. I’ll open a Twitter account and we will advertise for the study on Covid delirium. We enrolled 2,100 patients in two weeks. And so I decided to stay on Twitter to share and validate people’s stories and spread good science about long Covid and brain dysfunction and PICS and such.
And then about six months ago, people in the office said you need to get on TikTok and I said, “No, I’m drawing the line.” But there’s this crazy set of misinformation being spread on TikTok, misinformation so egregious that I thought, “You know what, I’m just going to try five videos and see what happens.” So all I do is I sit in my office, flip my phone around, and give a two to three minute message on some topic, and I post it. I don’t spend any time on it, there’s no production. It’s super old school. But if it’s helping people, then I’ll keep doing it.
Chief Medical Officer Paul Kelly downplayed long COVID while justifying end of isolation requirements, medical specialist says
A leading medical specialist and long COVID patients say the chief medical officer (CMO) downplayed the state of long COVID in Australia while justifying the end of national isolation requirements.
Steven Faux, who heads up a long COVID clinic at a Sydney hospital, called the comments "unusual" and akin to "pulling the sheet over your head".
During a press conference last month, when the October 14 mandatory isolation end date was announced, Paul Kelly said health authorities were still assessing the extent of long COVID in Australia.
"We're not seeing a major picture of long COVID," he said.
"For the majority of Australians, we were not exposed to COVID before we had at least two vaccines.
"We know that the major risk factors for long COVID are having had infection before vaccination, being unvaccinated, having severe illness and having other types of COVID that were not Omicron."
Professor Faux, who co-directs the long COVID clinic at St Vincent's Hospital in Sydney, said Professor Kelly's comments did not accurately represent the patients who were presenting at his practice.
"Mostly we're seeing people who got [COVID-19] in December and that's the Omicron wave … and the majority we are seeing are vaccinated," Professor Faux said.