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I don't know but maybe inventing invalid models that have been challenged for decades by the patients suffering its consequences was not a good idea after all and neither was framing those challenges as a bunch of delusional hysterics. You know what they say: when the data contradict your model, ignore the data and promote the model even harder. Well, not so much saying it as doing exactly this.

In hindsight it looks really bad, but to be fair it looked bad the entire time, especially with all the bullying and efforts to discredit those challenges.

 
Interesting thread with some ongoing research. Still more questions than answers but overall more of the same we've already seen in ME and chronic illness in general, which none seem clued in on.



These patients and so many more like them. In fact probably for most patients, once you discount a high % of natural recovery and misdiagnosis that likely account for the vast majority of whatever "work" is supposed to mean:

 
Can anyone think why this would be?: "Non-hospitalized COVID patients had a slower recovery than hospitalized patients."

Some people can be hospitalised with glandular fever but I'm not aware of any data on how their long-term outcomes compare to others.
 
Can anyone think why this would be?: "Non-hospitalized COVID patients had a slower recovery than hospitalized patients."

Some people can be hospitalised with glandular fever but I'm not aware of any data on how their long-term outcomes compare to others.


I am not aware of data .
Two of my kids had pvfs after glandular fever : my daughter developed ME, my son didn't.
Both had relatively mild glandular fever

Although more acute, hospitalization lets you rest. It also perhaps encourages those around you to help so aiding recovery.
Non hospitalised are probably expected to just get on with it as soon as possible.
 
Can anyone think why this would be?: "Non-hospitalized COVID patients had a slower recovery than hospitalized patients."

That makes complete sense to me.

Symptoms that put you in hospital will be due to pneumonia, which will resolve fairly quickly. Symptoms for other reasons may well not.

I think bundling all these people into 'LongCovid' may be pretty unhelpful.
 
"A conversation with physiotherapist David Poulter and Pain Consultant Dr. Deepak Ravindran, consultant in Pain Medicine and lead for the Berkshire LongCovid Integrated Service (BLIS) in Reading, UK.

We discuss:
  • The kinds of symptoms and problems people are experiencing when they present to the Long Covid clinic
  • The finding that the vast majority – about 90% – of people with Long Covid are those who have had so-called “mild” disease, where they were not hospitalised.
  • Theories of the mechanisms underlying development and persistence of LC
  • Variability in how people respond to the virus
  • The controversy around use of the term “biopsychosocial” as some patients feel that this term has been mis-used
  • ME/CFS and other post-viral fatigue syndromes share many similarities with LC
  • The hope that the recent public interest in LC may positively effect research and future outcomes for people with with ME
  • In the year 2021, will anyone be diagnosed with ME/CFS, or will everyone presenting with these symptoms be diagnosed with Long Covid?
  • It’s important to validate people’s lived experience of Long Covid. At the same time, is there a possibility that exposure to a lot of content about Long Covid may create a “nocebo effect” for those who catch the virus?
  • Activism and its impact on funding
  • Pacing; what is it? This term means wildly different things to different people.
  • Physical and cognitive rest and “flight mode”"

https://getbetteronline.co.uk/whats-going-on-with-long-covid/

Unhelpfully, someone has replied to the tweet below promoting the above suggesting Vogt and Recovery Norge are worth a look.
 
Can anyone think why this would be?: "Non-hospitalized COVID patients had a slower recovery than hospitalized patients."

Some people can be hospitalised with glandular fever but I'm not aware of any data on how their long-term outcomes compare to others.

That makes complete sense to me.

Symptoms that put you in hospital will be due to pneumonia, which will resolve fairly quickly. Symptoms for other reasons may well not.

When certain organs are attacked it can become life threatening very quickly but other organs can be badly damaged but you can keep going. Consider a bladder infection as opposed to a lung infection.

Not being hospitalized does not mean that the infection was milder or did not cause widespread damage.

The other thing is that being given steroids or the other drugs they used in hospitals for covid would have helped all infected organs not just the lungs or the heart damage that led to being there.

Also being in hospital means not having to do anything else. ME was said to be caused by people having an infection but being forced to carry on doing things. A mother of 3 kids will not be able to stop looking after them with a mild infection while being in hospital she could rest.
 
Can anyone think why this would be?: "Non-hospitalized COVID patients had a slower recovery than hospitalized patients."

Some people can be hospitalised with glandular fever but I'm not aware of any data on how their long-term outcomes compare to others.
There have been some speculation that it could be down to some standard treatments used in hospital settings. Which could make sense, but another possibility raised is a difference in early immune response causing more acute illness but lowering long-term problems.

Then again it could be entirely a fluke based on a variety of factors like viral load, site of infection and so on. We're dealing with chaos here, few of the factors are linear.
 
no one has mentioned the reluctance of gps to actually send people with flu symptoms to hospitals . my case of beijing flu in 1990 put me to bed with a high fever for the best part of two weeks if i had not been visiting my parents when i got sick it would of been necessary to go into hospital . i have no idea whatsoever of just how many people where cared for at home in these circumstances .
 
There is an interesting paper in the BMJ (link, main PDF) entitled "Risk of clinical sequelae after the acute phase of SARS-CoV-2 infection: retrospective cohort study" using large coded health records data to estimate the excess risk of developing various conditions in the aftermath of a COVID-19 infection.

As can be seen from Table 3 (pp 19-24) in the supplemental data, the risk of a fatigue-related diagnosis is markedly elevated even at six months out relative to the 2020 comparator group (healthy controls).

Unfortunately, the authors chose to aggregate G93.3 (PVFS), chronic fatigue NOS (R53.82) and fatigue (R53) together to create a generic "fatigue diagnosis" category. I would have liked to have seen the data for G93.3 alone; they also failed to consider that some patients may have been diagnosed with CFS but had this recorded using the F48 fatigue syndrome (formerly neurasthenia) code.

Still, there's some interesting data here, including for myalgia (B33, M79) and POTS (I49.9).
 
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In the Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet today:

Läkaren larmar: ME/CFS kommer öka dramatiskt efter pandemin
https://www.aftonbladet.se/nyheter/...r-me-cfs-kommer-oka-dramatiskt-efter-pandemin

Google Translate, English
Auto-translate said:
Doctor alerts: ME/CFS will increase dramatically after pandemic

Pain doctor Björn Bragée is now warning that ME/CFS will increase dramatically after the pandemic because it has a known link to viral outbreaks.

- It is obvious that the number will increase, but Sweden is very much on the sidelines on this issue, says pain doctor Björn Bragée. [...]

He says there is a "wait and see mentality" in Sweden that can be devastating for patients with long covid.

- 'Wait and see' means that patients who experience post-viral illness are not offered any care, they feel very bad about it and the prognosis gets worse.

Björn Bragée believes that current resources will be insufficient and that a large proportion of these patients may be unable to work.

- This will lead to very high costs. If 10,000 patients become long-term sick, that means insurance and social costs of SEK 5 to 10 billion a year.

A disease that health care shuns

He says primary care needs to learn more about ME/CFS and its possible link to post-covid.

- There is a need for clinics for both post-covid and ME/CFS. We don't yet know for sure what the differences are between these two conditions, he says.

Björn Bragée feels that healthcare providers are afraid of ME/CFS because they don't have enough knowledge.

- This is the disease that healthcare shies away from. There are as many people with MS and rheumatic disease - combined. And so there is one clinic in Sweden for ME. What happens when even more people fall ill after covid-19 and there is no one to take care of them in the health care system?

Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
ETA: There's another article today in Aftonbladet, about a man who experienced PVFS/ME symptoms, believed he had recovered, then came down with covid-19, and has now been diagnosed with ME. The article is more about daily life with ME than covid/postcovid, so I chose to post it in the News from Scandinavia thread, since I had already posted a video about him in that thread the other day.
 
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Neurology Today: Drs. Anthony Fauci and Walter Koroshetz on the Turning Point for COVID-19 and the Work That Remains

quote:
What is post-acute sequelae of COVID-19, or TASC, and how is it different from other post-viral syndromes like chronic fatigue syndrome?

Dr. Koroshetz: We know very little about the biological underpinnings of what people are suffering with. But we do know, unfortunately, it's not a minor problem. The percentage of people could be below 10 percent, but given the fact that so many have been infected, that's still going to be a lot of people. We also know now that the hope that this might be something like infectious mononucleosis, that it might take six months and then you'll be fine—there's certainly evidence now that for some people that's not happening, that some still have problems past six months.

The most prominent symptom of the TASC is fatigue, along with memory and attention problems. Other symptoms include dysautonomia, postural orthostatic tachycardia, pain syndromes, abnormal sensations, and sleep disturbances.

Neurologists must play a really important role in getting to the bottom of this problem. Dr. Fauci and I have been asked by [NIH Director] Dr. Francis Collins to really push on chronic fatigue syndrome [CFS]. There are incredible parallels between the cluster of symptoms seen in those two conditions, and we've never been able to figure that one out. The CFS is a real mystery. But in that case, we never knew what the virus was. A lot of people said they had a viral illness, and then they had this trouble. Now, with TASC, we know what virus they had and when they had it. We can try to trace the biology, hopefully, get some clues to help us understand and treat patients with post-acute COVID-19, and potentially even for the tens of thousands with CFS.

Dr. Fauci: We've been chasing myalgic encephalomyelitis without knowing what the etiologic agent was. Now, we have an absolutely identified etiologic agent. That should be very helpful now in being able to help us understand it. I hope we do. It's been mysterious to us for years. Maybe this will give us a chance at a breakthrough.
 
Yes, it's a typo

Great, thank you :) There's already "long covid", "postcovid" and "PACS". No need to add more to the confusion, or else they will soon have as many different names for their disease as there is for ME :D

In Sweden it seems to me that many (most?) of the people who have the disease are now calling it "long covid" ("LC" or "långtidscovid"). Except for the doctors who have the disease, they tend to call it "PACS" instead. The National Board of Health and Welfare/Socialstyrelsen, the government, healthcare professionals, researchers and the media are usually calling it "postcovid" ("postcovid - kvarstående eller sena symtom efter covid-19", "remaining or late symptoms after covid-19").

How are these names being used in the countries where you guys live?
 
In Sweden it seems to me that many (most?) of the people who have the disease are now calling it "long covid" ("LC" or "långtidscovid"). Except for the doctors who have the disease, they tend to call it "PACS" instead.
Oh, that's interesting. I had the impression Long Covid was preferred over PASC by patients.

How are these names being used in the countries where you guys live?

Here we just don't talk about it, or we use euphemisms. The biopsychosocial brigade has been busy spreading the word that information about it causes it. Young people believe an infection has no risk for them. Some deliberately get themselves infected, and even pay for it. They've been prevented from taking an informed choice.
 
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