Chandelier
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Media Won’t Stop Psychologizing Long Covid
Media outlets that trumpet their journalistic integrity have used their prestige to launder an unproven, anti-science conspiracy theory about Long Covid.
JUNE 25, 2026
Media Won’t Stop Psychologizing Long Covid
JUSTINE BARRON2800-word article.Justine Barron is a writer and investigative journalist who focuses on criminal justice, disability and media criticism. She is the author of They Killed Freddie Gray: The Anatomy of a Police Brutality Cover-Up (Arcade Publishing, 2023). She can be found on Twitter at @jewstein3000.
From the end:
By neglecting to report seriously on Long Covid, corporate media often miss a huge part of the stories they tell. For instance, some media outlets (e.g., ABC News, 2/3/25) did report on a 2025 CDC study that more than 1 million children in the US have Long Covid, which was data from 2023. A more recent study indicates that Long Covid is now the No. 1 chronic illness in children in the US, surpassing asthma.
Yet Long Covid isn’t mentioned in media reports on the crisis in chronic student absenteeism (e.g., New York Times, 2/2/24; Washington Post, 5/7/22; New Yorker, 1/15/24), or the crisis in childhood test scores and cognition (e.g., AP, 6/10/26; New Yorker, 6/12/26). Instead, the media tend to scratch their collective head and blame anxiety, screens and lockdowns.
The media tendency to ignore, deny and/or psychologize Long Covid causes significant harm to both patients and the general public, who are not being warned of the risk. Patients face disbelief and bigotry from families, workplaces and even doctors, who often get more information from the media than from journals. The gulf between medical research and practice is estimated to be 17 years on average.
Prejudices against patients are reinforced when a news outlet’s most in-depth, academic-sounding articles on Long Covid attempt to undermine the reality of the disease.