Preprint Patient-Made Knowledge Networks: Long COVID Discourse, Epistemic Injustice, and Online Community Formation, 2026, Ammari

Dolphin

Senior Member (Voting Rights)

[Submitted on 16 Feb 2026]

Patient-Made Knowledge Networks: Long COVID Discourse, Epistemic Injustice, and Online Community Formation​


Tawfiq Ammari


Long COVID represents an unprecedented case of patient-led illness definition, emerging through Twitter in May 2020 when patients began collectively naming, documenting, and legitimizing their condition before medical institutions recognized it. This study examines 2.8 million tweets containing #LongCOVID to understand how contested illness communities construct knowledge networks and respond to epistemic injustice. Through topic modeling, reflexive thematic analysis, and exponential random graph modeling (ERGM), we identify seven discourse themes spanning symptom documentation, medical dismissal, cross-illness solidarity, and policy advocacy. Our analysis reveals a differentiated ecosystem of user roles -- including patient advocates, research coordinators, and citizen scientists -- who collectively challenge medical gatekeeping while building connections to established ME/CFS advocacy networks. ERGM results demonstrate that tie formation centers on epistemic practices: users discussing knowledge sharing and community building formed significantly more network connections than those focused on policy debates, supporting characterization of this space as an epistemic community. Long COVID patients experienced medical gaslighting patterns documented across contested illnesses, yet achieved WHO recognition within months -- contrasting sharply with decades-long struggles of similar conditions. These findings illuminate how social media affordances enable marginalized patient populations to rapidly construct alternative knowledge systems, form cross-illness coalitions, and contest traditional medical authority structures.
 
First of its kind, and it led to absolutely nothing. The medical profession has done nothing to improve on it, and almost all of this public discourse has ended.

Maybe the next one will be successful, but this only makes it clear how impossible the task is. All of this, and it just completely fell apart with nothing at all to show for it. You can't win against the house, the house always wins, and that means we lose.
 
Back
Top Bottom