Rehabilitation needs of long COVID patients in British Columbia, 2026, Moecke et al.

SNT Gatchaman

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Rehabilitation needs of long COVID patients in British Columbia
Débora M Petry Moecke; Evan H Kwong; Sonya Cressman; Jennifer Yao; Chiara Singh; Carolyn Taylor; Pat G Camp

INTRODUCTION
COVID-19 can result in persistent symptoms and functional impairment that significantly impact daily functioning, highlighting the need for targeted rehabilitation. However, there is a lack of data on what proportion of long COVID patients need rehabilitation and which types are required.

OBJECTIVE
To estimate the rehabilitation needs of patients with long COVID.

DESIGN
Retrospective, cross-sectional analysis of clinical data.

SETTING
Post-COVID recovery clinic in British Columbia, Canada.

PARTICIPANTS
Individuals with long COVID, defined as having symptoms persisting beyond 3 months post infection, with the first clinic visit occurring within 6 months post infection.

INTERVENTION
Not applicable.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
We created thresholds based on objective tests and patient-reported outcomes to determine rehabilitation needs.

RESULTS
Data from 3709 patients who visited the clinic between March 2020 and May 2023 were available for analysis; 33% met the study eligibility criteria (n = 1237). Patients were primarily women (65%) and white (57%), with a mean age of 49 ± 14 years. Two thirds had required hospitalization. The average time from infection to clinic visit was 136 ± 34 days. At 3–6 months post infection, the most common COVID-19 symptoms were fatigue, dyspnea, muscle weakness, and muscle/joint aches. Most patients exceeded the rehabilitation threshold for dyspnea (83%), fatigue (78%), frailty (74%), and posttraumatic stress disorder (58%). Quality of life was impaired for 80%. Neuropsychological symptoms like anxiety (42%) and depression (36%) were also prevalent. Reductions in 6-minute walk distance (≥25%) and sit-to-stand performance (≥50%) occurred in 26% and 55% of patients, respectively. The majority of participants (98%) exceeded at least one test threshold for rehabilitation, and most (85%) were eligible for more than one type. The most required types of rehabilitation were pulmonary rehabilitation (83%), mental health support (78%), and neurorehabilitation (70%).

CONCLUSION
The need for rehabilitation services among individuals experiencing long COVID in British Columbia is substantial. Use of predefined thresholds that incorporate measures of both symptom burden and functional impairment can effectively support the identification of high-need patients and their overall rehabilitation needs. Combined with clinicians expertise, this approach can facilitate timely, evidence-based referrals to specialized care for those who need it.

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Interesting that ongoing symptoms and disability are classed as 'rehabilitation need' rather than, for example, financial and medical and care support needs. No mention of whether fulfilling the 'rehabilitation need' will actually help any of them.
 
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"Imagine a world"-based medicine is a rehabilitation clinic that isn't able to rehabilitate a patient population, for which rehabilitation is entirely the wrong approach, asserts that rehabilitation services are needed, because reasons, despite 6 years of failing at it. Which itself follows literal decades of this approach failing miserably, somehow the reason why they have been going on with it and failing for 6 years.

And, as is tradition, pretty entirely based on "these people with disabling symptoms have symptoms" and not a single further thought given to it. "Rehabilitation" is simply assumed to be effective, speculatively, based on nothing at all.

And no matter how totally insane this is, literally nothing happens when this is explained in simple terms. What a freaking nightmare.
 
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