ross douthat
Right, but then you also have patients who have symptoms that clearly would place them into the long Covid diagnostic bucket, but who didn’t test positive at the outset or didn’t get tested because it was obviously really hard to get a Covid test in the first few months of the outbreak, but later on, don’t test positive for antibodies six months or a year after the initial infection. There are studies of patients who report long Covid symptoms who find people in the studies who have the symptoms fall into these no initial positive test or no antibody test.
And that connects to what I think is the fourth commonplace explanation for long Covid to go with the explanations you’ve just offered, right, which is that it is, in some sense, actually, mental health related and some version of what is often called a psychosomatic or psychogenic illness, with the basic argument being that Covid-19 was for everyone a kind of psychologically traumatic experience. Everyone had less social connection, had more anxiety about the future, knew people who were getting sick, lived in fear of the illness.
And this created some kind of collective mental health crisis. And mental health problems manifest in all kinds of different ways. But for some of these people who are being diagnosed with long Covid, they actually never had it. And somehow they have acquired a psychosomatic illness that mimics it. So what do you think of that argument?
meghan o'rourke
Yeah, so there’s a lot in there that I want to try to unpack. First, let’s acknowledge that because of the terrible lack of testing and the unpreparedness of the American government for the coronavirus, we have all these people who got sick with something in March or April of 2020. They weren’t able to get a test, and then they never get better. Let’s stipulate that in that cohort, sure, there are some people who didn’t maybe even have Covid.
That said, you have this enormous population of up to 30 percent of people all manifesting with a very similar set of symptoms, some of which clearly point to autonomic nervous system disorder or others of which point to ongoing inflammation.
There are biomarkers we can look at that show that these patients have very specific kinds of dysregulation of their immune system and ongoing activation of certain cells, sometimes elevated autoantibody levels. Again, those are the kind of autoimmune antibodies that should be fighting viruses. And pathogens instead start fighting your own body and attacking your own tissue. That’s what an autoimmune antibody is.
ross douthat
What you’re describing is kind of a deeper layer of testing than the kind of tests that you get if you go into an ER and they run a battery of blood work on you.
meghan o'rourke
Exactly, so when researchers like those at Yale or those in San Francisco who are really looking at the biomarkers and trying to understand what’s happening to these patients. They are finding things, right? They’re finding very clear signs of dysregulation. What does it all add up to? They’re still trying to work on that and put it together. So I think that clearly, the experience of Covid was psychologically upsetting for many people. I don’t see that there’s a causation between that that we know of that shows that that triggered a psychosomatic illness.
The other thing that’s really important to say is that even if we’re seeing in this cohort people who didn’t actually have Covid, let’s say we’re looking at all the antibodies. First of all, we do know that antibodies wane, right? So it’s hard to use that as our marker. Second of all, even if some of those people didn’t have Covid, it doesn’t mean that this was all psychosomatic. Some of those people might have had incipient autoimmune diseases. And yes, they’re getting caught up and thinking of their symptoms as long Covid when perhaps they never had the virus. But it doesn’t mean they’re imagining it.
Now, is brain, mind, body all deeply connected in ways that hopefully we’ll talk about a little bit later? Yes. But could people who have long Covid also be suffering from depression? Absolutely. Many people with chronic illnesses also suffer from depression caused by their symptoms.
But one thing that’s really important to note, too, is that some of the researchers I spoke to were really frustrated by this particular line of thinking, partly because they were — and I’m thinking of David Putrino at Mount Sinai. He was really able to identify that the cohort of patients who had positive tests and the cohort of patients who didn’t, but were coming and saying, I think I had Covid, and these are my symptoms, really overlapped. Their symptoms really overlapped, their progression really overlapped. Some of their biomarkers overlapped. So, given that we didn’t have those tests, that’s pretty good data. People are really doing that work to try to figure out who their cohort is and who really has an overlapping condition or sets of conditions triggered by Covid. So it’s not like that work isn’t being done.
ross douthat
Well, and also, I mean, one key difference here, I think, between how long Covid has been sort of experienced by the medical system and how other illnesses have been experienced is that the traditional pattern is that chronic illness sort of creeps up on society. It may be linked to some kind of infection. There are theories that chronic fatigue syndrome can be linked to, for instance, Epstein-Barr, which lots and lots of people have. But there isn’t this sort of moment when, suddenly, tens of thousands of people who weren’t sick before are sick with something new in the span of three to six months.
And my impression is that that has made the medical system as a whole much more responsive to long Covid than it has been to other chronic illnesses. That you do have this argument that it’s fairly common that, well, this is probably at least partially psychosomatic, or it’s mass hysteria. But within the medical system, that idea is weaker than it’s been with other chronic illnesses, not least because so many doctors and nurses, because they were on the front lines of the epidemic, have also been the people who get long Covid.
meghan o'rourke
There’s two differences here, right? One is that this is happening on such an enormous scale, as you said, it’s just harder to write off. The evidence is before people’s eyes. It’s in the hospitals. It’s in doctors’ rooms. Second is exactly as you say. So many doctors either got sick with Covid or knows someone who got sick with Covid.
And as one of the doctors at the Mount Sinai Center for Post-Covid Care told me, he said these are my colleagues. I’m going to believe them. And that did change my mind and open my mind to this. And they were able to report on and be detectives about their symptoms in a way that might have been harder for a person who didn’t have medical training.
ross douthat
Right, and that, of course, is an experience that both you and I have had ourselves, right? And so I mentioned this at the outset, but listeners should know that we are not unbiased discussants of this question of chronic illness. And you in particular have come to the subject out of not years, but decades of personal experience.
So let’s pivot to the personal for a minute and start getting our own biases in this conversation out in the open. And actually, we can talk a little bit about whether being a patient is a form of bias or whether it’s sort of a necessary aspect of understanding. But when did you get sick, Meghan O’Rourke?
meghan o'rourke
Yeah, Ross.
ross douthat
Patient zero.
meghan o'rourke
Patient zero. I don’t know, and this is one of the things that makes it such a hard story to tell and so easy for me to imagine other people not believing it. I don’t exactly know. I had little things, kind of strange little things all my life. And in retrospect, I have been clearly diagnosed with some things that would explain that.
But what I can point to is that after I graduated from Yale in 1997, my family and I rented a house in Stony Creek, Connecticut for a week, not too far from Lyme, Connecticut, and had a graduation party, a week of rest and relaxation. And I just started feeling bad that summer. I got some kind of little flu, summer flu, and then, in the fall, started to have a very distinct set of neurological symptoms for the first time.
And those symptoms were strange electric shocks that would run up and down my body. It felt like someone was taking tiny needles and pricking me, not even tiny needles, and just pricking me all over my body, particularly my legs and my arms. It was so intense that if I didn’t rub my legs and my arms to sort of distract my nervous system from what was happening, they would start to twitch and even spasm.
I started experiencing intense vertigo. At the time I worked at The New Yorker magazine, and it had two floors that were connected by a set of stairs where it was just floating planks with no back. And I started to find it really hard to walk up and down those stairs. I would get intense vertigo and dizziness. Now, this was really odd to me because I had been a pretty intense gymnast most of my life and an athlete who was used to flipping around in the air and having good air sense, as we all heard that term from Simone Biles this summer.
So this was really noticeable to me. I thought something weird is going on. But I thought, ah, maybe this is just what happens when you get to your 20s. And I start having these strange bouts of fatigue, very intense fatigue, and brain fog, and it would come and go. And then I started having hives all over my body. And then I started having joint pain and very intense night sweats, and the list goes on.
ross douthat
And so what you’re describing is a multiyear period.
meghan o'rourke
This is a multiyear period. It starts in the fall of 1997 when I was 21. And it goes on and off until I’m 32 with periods of relatively good health and then periods where I was pretty not well. But every doctor I saw said, oh, my God, your lab work is perfect. I ran half marathons. I really was able to keep functioning in the main, and nothing looked off, except, oh, here’s this autoimmune marker. Maybe you have lupus. We test for that. No, it goes away. So things would kind of show up and come and go, but they were very little signs. Like, I was really anemic sometimes, and yeah.
ross douthat
So what was it like to see doctors during this phase of your life?
meghan o'rourke
In the early phase, truth be told, I just thought, oh, they’re right. I’m a hypochondriac. I’m just a little bit. This is how everyone feels, and I’m just, I’m a poet. I’m sensitive. I just take it in. I worked really hard, right? So there was that explanation. I work really, really hard.
ross douthat
You were under stress.
meghan o'rourke
I’m stressed. I was under stress. I worked at The New Yorker. Then I was writing a weekly column at Slate and editing the culture section. I had a fast-paced, intense life. And so I thought, OK, maybe it’s normal that when I have to meet someone after work, I can barely keep my eyes open. But really, things came to a head when I was 32 and my mother died after a long, stressful period in which I was helping care for her. And I really hadn’t been sleeping.
And the day she died, I got a really bad virus and had to take antibiotics. And just, no one knew exactly what it was. And I just never quite got better. A few months later, I got diagnosed with Epstein-Barr virus. And from then on, I really went downhill. And in that period in my 30s where I was starting to feel that my life was, more or less, over, as I had known it— in fact, more over, not less over. But my life was pretty much over as I had known it.
And in that period, it was really heartbreaking to see doctors. And it was heartbreaking not because they dismissed me entirely. They were really nice. I had great doctors. But they just weren’t in a system that was set up to help them become the kind of detective that they were going to need to be to figure out what was wrong with me.
So, again and again, it was, well, you’re a little anemic. Maybe we should give you some iron. Then a really wonderful doctor realized. She’s like, I’m sure, listening to you, that you have some kind of autoimmune disease. I was diagnosed with autoimmune thyroiditis. I took thyroid medicine. And the idea was, OK, that’s why you’re tired. You’re going to get better. But I just didn’t get better. And in fact, the symptoms were getting worse, in particular, the cognitive symptoms and the brain fog and the neurological symptoms.
And so it was very puzzling and sad because I would say, well, but what about the fact that I’m shaking all the time? And she would say, well, let’s do some more tests, or I would go to a neurologist or I would go to a rheumatologist. But my symptoms were so strangely roaming across all systems of my body that it was really hard to find the one person who was going to listen. Almost no doctor ever got the full list of my symptoms because they’re all specialists.
ross douthat
Well, and also maybe you were a little reluctant to give them the full list because of how they would look at you?
meghan o'rourke
Yeah, as I think I say in the book that I’ve just written, at some point, I realized that I was what this very famous paper coined the term for what doctors call “heartsink patients.” And they’re patients who go from doctor to doctor. Their medical records have a long list of their symptoms, and kind of won’t take no for an answer and insist something really is wrong with them. And that was me. And so very early, I realized, oh, I should not tell the doctor all my symptoms. I just shouldn’t. I should focus on the one that’s causing me the most suffering.
ross douthat
Right, there is incredible pressure — I have certainly found this— to be a reasonable patient.
meghan o'rourke
Yes.
ross douthat
Right, you want to present as a patient as a reasonable person because only by presenting as a reasonable person can you trust that a reasonable doctor will take you seriously.
meghan o'rourke
Yes, absolutely.
ross douthat
So I want to focus on an aspect of this, which I think can get easily overlooked, which is that when we’re describing chronic illnesses, the language that we end up using can sometimes obscure or just seem to minimize the actual experience of the suffering itself. So when you talk about symptoms like fatigue or brain fog, what are we actually talking about? What does it actually feel like to experience one of these conditions day in and day out?
meghan o'rourke
Well, I’m sure there’s many different manifestations. And so I can talk about mine, which is — and I think what we both had, Ross, were infections that also destroyed our immune systems or did things to our immune systems. So in my case, it’s almost beyond language. It was not like being tired. Fatigue was the only word I had. We don’t have a word in the English language for what I felt.
But what I felt was that the cells in my body were unable to perform the most basic of functions. That’s what it felt like. It felt like if I were trying to stand up out of bed, I was made of sand. And I was trying to hold all that sand together. And it was incredibly heavy. And there was pain that roamed all around my body. To be honest, pain was the least of it. Pain was something I could kind of focus on and manage.
The hardest part about it — and I ended up trying to write about this in my last book of poems because I do think in some way, we don’t have literal language for it, right? That we do need to find a kind of invented language for this experience. But for me, it was the brain fog, right? Which I think you hear if you’ve never suffered from it in an intense way, and you think, OK, we’ve all had those fuzzy days. You just kind of focus and carry on.
And I guess what I would encourage listeners who’ve never suffered from this kind of illness to imagine is maybe you’ve had a really bad hangover. Maybe you had a really strong reaction to your Covid vaccine shot. Maybe you had a flu once. Imagine the worst hour of that flu. Imagine that it goes on and on and on for weeks, and then months, and then years, and it never, ever goes away. And on top of that, you have all these other problems that no one can explain to you.
And so I think for me, I was suffering in that way, but no one was recognizing that suffering, with maybe one or two exceptions. So I also was wondering, am I losing my mind, right? Is something really wrong with me mentally? Have I completely lost my grasp on reality? And I would toggle between that question and then seeing a doctor who clearly was not taking in the import of what I was saying. And at this point, I was also doing a lot of research and reading and starting to educate myself on what might be going on in my body.
And having a reaction to them by thinking, I do know things about my experience that you don’t know. I am living at the edge of medical knowledge, I found myself thinking one day. And at that point, when I articulated that to myself, it just made it much clearer that I had to believe what was happening was real, and I had to try to find an answer. But I think another part of it that was hard — and I think you suffered from this, too, and you write about it really beautifully in your book — is that it kind of changed.
So it would be that one flulike feeling all the time, but then on top of it, I might have the electric shocks. Or on top of it, I might have horrific hip pain that made it hard to walk up and down stairs. Or my heart would start to race, or my blood pressure would drop really, really low so I was fainting repeatedly and got a concussion. So I think the not knowing was a really hard part of it, too, which is — I remember saying to my husband, I wish there was just a little panel like the one I have on my heating system at home that would just say, code 42 error, you know? And then you could look it up in the manual and figure out what’s wrong.
ross douthat
Right, or that you could just sort of expect the same pain, right? You get into this weird feeling where you’re envying people who have one single thing wrong. You’re like, OK, this person had to have their leg amputated, and that’s terrible. But at least they wake up every day and they know, OK, today I wake up, and I don’t have a leg. Whereas you woke up every day and were like, hmm, I wonder if my heart won’t work today. I wonder if there will be pins in my foot today.