The argument Shure offers here is very old: Long Covid is just a manifestation of psychosocial distress. In the video, she never bothers to provide any evidence for this, besides mentioning that terrible study ("Association of Self-reported COVID-19 Infection and SARS-CoV-2 Serology Test...
Here's a good transcription. The video is bad to the point most people will find it somewhat offensive.
The video in question:
Taylor Lorenz, Critics HYSTERIC Over Long Covid Psychosomatic Possibility: Robby & Batya
(I'm not opposed to link things I disagree with. In order to criticize, we...
What can I say? They're arguing a garbage position, citing the same old garbage papers. The good news is that BPS LC researchers are a minority.
I find papers that attribute ME or LC to psychological causes pretty offensive because I've been personally harmed by diagnostic overshadowing. When I...
In the US, if you earn above a certain amount, your benefits eventually stop. But your earnings never reduce your benefit amount. (This is for people who are receiving disability benefits based on their work history. For people who didn't/couldn't build up a career before becoming disabled...
We've done that in the US for a long time. If you're receiving SSDI and you return to work, you continue receiving full benefits for 9 months. If you stop working after less than 3 years, your benefits are reinstated immediately and if it's under 5 years, you need to reapply, but under a simpler...
It absolutely is. There's degrees of evidence, you know. The studies recommending GET are (at best) collections of anecdotes. The sources recommending against CBT/GET or claiming ME is a real illness are clinicial practice guidelines, generally accepted as the strongest form of medical evidence.
Effect of Lithium Therapy on Long COVID Symptoms
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05618587
News Coverage:
Could low-dose lithium treat long COVID? UB launches clinical trial to find out
https://www.buffalo.edu/news/releases/2023/01/002.html
Context:
Dr. Guttsuo at the University of...
I'd disagree we've learned nothing in 3 years. We've gathered many statistics on the prevalence and symptom picture of LC. We've determined that Covid affects the brain's structure in specific ways. We've found some signs of immune dysregulation. However, your frustration is understandable...
Physical activity is great and whatnot but we can't claim it's a cure-all. Lifestyle interventions difficult to stick to, and only provide some benefit so need to be combined with medicine.
We know PEM is a common long Covid symptom and one of the few medical reasons not to exercise...
That would be similar to what the US does for people claiming Social Security Disability Insurance. You don't see a doctor from Social Security unless your medical records are spotty.
They found that vaccination protects against long Covid:
1 dose: No significant difference
2 doses: 70% as likely as an unvaccinated person
3 doses: 32% as likely
4 doses: 3% as likely
Almost all these people got the AstraZenica vaccine, which is common in the UK but not the US. (See the...
I'm going to die alone, destitute, and in squalor after decades of intense and unremitting suffering because scientists research this instead of treatments.
I highly appreciate that they mentioned intimacy as an area of life affect by LC. (Link to video at 1:03) The effect of my illness on that part of my life has been the most emotionally impactful loss for me.
So people have a lower opinion of their own abilities when they're in a bad mood? What a waste of money. People with FM need basic and translational biomedical research that will yield new treatments, not psychosocial frittering.
Paxlovid rebound only occurs in 10-30% of people, and when it does, it's rarely serious. It seems to me like there's nothing to lose. If you get rebound your illness will probably be less severe than it would have been, since your adaptive immune system has more time to respond.
There are good ways and bad ways to link together mental and physical healthcare and this sounds like a bad way. Discussing the effect of anxiety and depression on long-term health outcomes and such.
Media coverage in the Conversation:
Long COVID stemmed from mild cases of COVID-19 in most people, according to a new multicountry study
https://theconversation.com/long-covid-stemmed-from-mild-cases-of-covid-19-in-most-people-according-to-a-new-multicountry-study-195707
Inflation is hurting me less than most people, since US disability benefits are tied to inflation, and wages are falling behind. However, that ignores the fact that I'm living on around 40% of the median salary in my country.
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