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Qualitative research into Long Covid will help us better understand its impact on human bodies, health care and social worlds.

New research into the social dimensions of Long Covid offers invaluable insights for its prevention, treatment and care. The longitudinal study focuses on storied accounts of participants embodied experience of COVID-19, how they are navigating recovery and adapting to new and changing physical capacities.

Current estimates of Long Covids prevalence are hindered by the absence of internationally accepted definitions, however the sheer number of COVID cases globally means its likely that millions of people are already experiencing long-term illness, says qualitative research co-lead UNSW ScientiaAssociate Professor Kari Lancaster from UNSWs Centre for Social Research in Health (CSRH).

Patients accounts of their experiences of illness and care help direct our attention to the different kinds of support required in managing an uncertain and unknown recovery and give Long Covid much-needed visibility, she says.

Our interdisciplinary approach has been both innovative and necessary, with qualitative research working in dialogue with the clinical study, to learn from patient experience and expertise.

The research is part of the following people post-COVID-19 infection, led by investigators from Kirby Institute at UNSW and St Vincents Hospital Sydney. The study is on the immune system through analysis in a laboratory setting.

One in five of participating patients was still experiencing symptoms beyond eight months, the research found. The acute phase of the illness can last up to two weeks, beyond that you potentially have a post-acute illness, and anything that lasts beyond 12 weeks is now called Long Covid, says Professor Gail Matthews from The Kirby Institute, who leads the clinical research with UNSWs Scientia Professor Gregory Dore and Dr David Darley from St Vincents Hospital Sydney.

There are probably several different syndromes that cause Long Covid, Prof. Matthews says. There can be many underlying causes for somebody still being persistently symptomatic three months-plus after infection.

A/Prof. Lancaster agrees: Despite growing scientific attention, much about the longer-term clinical course of COVID-19 is uncertain. Undertaking qualitative research alongside the clinical study allows us to learn from patients lived experience.

Together with SHARP Professor Tim Rhodes and Dr Mia Harrison from CSRH, A/Prof. Lancaster is conducting in-depth interviews on Long Covids social impact, including disturbances to work and family life, and effects on bodily capacities and functioning.

Our research looks at the multiple, entangled and emergent effects of Long Covid on peoples lives as they navigate and make their recovery. It explores the implications of Long Covids social impact for the provision of clinical care and social care, A/Prof. Lancaster says.

Over the last two years, the researchers have conducted three rounds of interviews with 39 participants, aged between 27 and 79 years old at the time of diagnosis, with a diverse range of experiences. The majority received a positive PCR test in the first wave of COVID-19 between March and April 2020 with 62% of participants acquiring their infection locally.

The research recognises peoples embodied expertise

Significantly, Long Covid was itself made known through peoples lived experience, A/Prof. Lancaster says. Long Covid has emerged as a patient-made term to describe the complex, unfolding and unpredictable effects and prolonged illness experienced by some people following SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Worldwide, patients have reported on a constellation of symptoms affecting multiple body systems that are persistent and debilitating through mainstream and social media, online groups and subsequent patient-led clinical studies, she says. These symptoms include fatigue, shortness of breath, chest pain, muscular aches, palpitations, high temperatures, post-viral inflammatory reactions, cognitive dysfunction and psychological distress.

It's incredibly important to have social science and qualitative research in the mix, A/Prof. Lancaster says. Sometimes theres a tendency to think of these as purely biomedical or clinical problems when actually this is also about understanding the social and material effects in peoples lives.

These personal accounts make Long Covid real and demonstrate the importance of maintaining interventions social distancing, wearing a mask, and so on to care for each other as a community, A/Prof. Lancaster says. It's about understanding the broader pandemic context of why prevention matters and why vaccination is important and making that conversation public.

With clinical care already overstretched, insights into the social support needed beyond the clinical, as well as understanding what works for people and the community resources and care already in existence is vital, she says.

From other health social research, we know that the effect of illness is exacerbated by people's social and material circumstances. So, were thinking about how illness is experienced and how peoples lives are made precarious in the context of the pandemic.

The commitment to learning from community knowledge and practices in terms of how to negotiate safety, how to do prevention, how to look after each other, was strongly demonstrated in the HIV epidemic, she says. Social science played an integral role in reflecting back on biomedicine. Looking at these parallels helps guide the COVID response," she says.

Research within these fields has also shown the profound effect of stigma as a barrier to accessing care, she says. There are some really important lessons not to think of stigma as something out there, but as something thats actually very much made and reproduced in everyday mundane practices.

The researchers are also undertaking a parallel study examining the practices of healthcare workers involved in caring for patients with COVID-19. The interviews will examine how healthcare workers navigate symptom management, infectiousness, stigma, and physical and social isolation, initially and over time, as well as how they identify, implement and adapt practices of care in the context of the changing pandemic.

There are some insightful accounts from the participants we've spoken to in the context of the COVID study about fear of infection and stigma, especially early in the pandemic when so little was known. These accounts demonstrate how particular practices of care were really reassuring, including through touch. The reassurance that comes from someone touching you and saying you are no longer infectious; you can't pass this on anymore.

This research sits within the Evidence-Making Interventions in Health program at CSRH that investigates how to optimise the translation and implementation of complex health interventions through adaptive approaches to evidence-making.

Evidence is made in practices and is constantly being adapted. In situations of uncertainty and urgency, like weve seen in the COVID-19 pandemic, a key question is what constitutes evidence-enough for action?, A/Prof. Lancaster says. The program reflects critically on how knowledges and values are privileged or displaced within the messy processes of evidence- and knowledge-making that inform policymaking.

The program seeks to develop more complex and adaptive ways of thinking about evidence translation and intervention implementation that reflect the equally dynamic and emergent experiences of life lived with Covid, and other illnesses, for more adept policy responses, she says.

While questions about evidence are thrown into relief in the context of emergency, were arguing that these are actually lessons for the everyday. If we actually thought in more adaptive ways and paid attention to local knowledge, then more responsive and reflexive intervention and implementation is possible.

Lead image: Lead investigatorson the ADAPT project, Professor Gail Matthews and Dr David Darley from Kirby Institute at UNSW and St Vincents Hospital Sydney analysing the data. Image:St Vincents Clinic Foundation.

This article was originally published in 2022.

Written by Kay Harrison