Why scrapping the term 'long COVID' would be harmful for people with the condition
2024-03-20T08:34:00+11:00
Long COVID can be highly disabling, preventing people from engaging in study or paid work.
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Deborah Lupton,
People with long COVID have already fought hard to become visible.
Why scrapping the term ālong COVIDā would be harmful for people with theĀ condition
The assertion from Queenslandās chief health officer that itās time to stop using the term ālong COVIDā has made waves in and over recent days.
Gerrardās comments were related to from his team finding long-term symptoms of COVID are similar to the ongoing symptoms following other viral infections.
But there are limitations in this research, and problems with Gerrardās argument we should drop the term ālong COVIDā. Hereās why.
A bit about the research
The study involved texting a survey to 5,112 Queensland adults who had experienced respiratory symptoms and had sought a PCR test in 2022. Respondents were contacted 12 months after the PCR test. Some had tested positive to COVID, while others had tested positive to influenza or had not tested positive to either disease.
Survey respondents were asked if they had experienced ongoing symptoms or any functional impairment over the previous year.
The study found people with respiratory symptoms can suffer long-term symptoms and impairment, regardless of whether they had COVID, influenza or another respiratory disease. These symptoms are often referred to as āpost-viralā, as they linger after a viral infection.
Gerrardās research will be presented in April at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases. It hasnāt been published in a peer-reviewed journal.
After the research was publicised last Friday, some experts highlighted flaws in the study design. For example, , a long COVID clinician interviewed on ABCās television news, said the study excluded people who were hospitalised with COVID (therefore leaving out people who had the most severe symptoms). He also noted differing levels of vaccination against COVID and influenza may have influenced the findings.
In addition, Faux pointed out the survey would have excluded many older people who may not use smartphones.
The authors of the research have acknowledged some of these and other limitations in their study.
Ditching the term ālong COVIDā
Based on the research findings, :
We believe it is time to stop using terms like ālong COVIDā. They wrongly imply there is something unique and exceptional about longer term symptoms associated with this virus. This terminology can cause unnecessary fear, and in some cases, hypervigilance to longer symptoms that can impede recovery.
But Gerrard and his teamās findings cannot substantiate these assertions. Their survey only documented symptoms and impairment after respiratory infections. It didnāt ask people how fearful they were, or whether a term such as long COVID made them especially vigilant, for example.
In discussing Gerrardās conclusions about the terminology, Faux noted that even if only 3% of people develop long COVID (the survey found 3% of people had functional limitations after a year), this would equate to some 150,000 Queenslanders with the condition. He :
To suggest that by not calling it long COVID you would be [ā¦] somehow helping those people not to focus on their symptoms is a curious conclusion from that study.
Another clinician and researcher, Philip Britton, about the language as āoverstated and potentially unhelpfulā. He noted the term ālong COVIDā is recognised by the World Health Organization as a valid description of the condition.
A cruel irony
An continues to show how COVID can cause harm to the body across organ systems and cells.
We know from the experiences shared by people with long COVID that the condition can be highly disabling, preventing them from engaging in study . It can also harm relationships with their friends, family members, and .
Despite all this, people with long COVID have often felt gaslit and unheard. When seeking treatment from health-care professionals, many people with long COVID report they have been or turned away.
Last Friday ā the day Gerrardās comments were made public ā was actually , organised by activists to draw attention to the condition.
The response from people with long COVID was immediate. They shared their anger about Gerrardās comments, especially their timing, on a day designed to generate greater recognition for their illness.
Since the start of the COVID pandemic, patient communities have of the long-term symptoms many people faced.
The term āā was in fact coined by people suffering persistent symptoms after a COVID infection, who were seeking words to describe what they were going through.
The role people with long COVID have played in defining their condition and bringing medical and public attention to it demonstrates . For decades, people with invisible or āsilentā conditions such as ME/CFS (myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome) have had to fight ignorance from health-care professionals and stigma from others in their lives. They have often been told their disabling symptoms are .
Gerrardās comments, and the mediaās amplification of them, repudiates the term ālong COVIDā that community members have chosen to give their condition an identity and support each other. This is likely to cause distress and exacerbate feelings of abandonment.
Terminology matters
The words we use to describe illnesses and conditions are incredibly powerful. is a step towards better recognition of peopleās suffering, and hopefully, better diagnosis, health care, treatment and acceptance by others.
The term ālong COVIDā provides an easily understandable label to convey patientsā experiences to others. It is well known to the public. It has been routinely used in news media reporting and and in many reputable .
Most importantly, scrapping the label would further marginalise a large group of people with a chronic illness who have often been left to struggle behind closed doors.
, SHARP Professor, Vitalities Lab, Centre for Social Research in Health and Social Policy Centre, and the ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making and Society,
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