rvallee
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Another fantastic article by Ed Yong, on the abysmal experience of health care workers dealing with gaslighting and denial from their colleagues. Very similar to Royal Free and other outbreaks, just on a much larger scale.
It seems that health care workers do not like being treated like they treat patients. Some also seem concerned that once they become patients, everything they say is dismissed as irrelevant. They do not seem to enjoy being on the other side of that experience. Much to learn here.
When one journalist genuinely understands more about a disease than 99.99% of medicine combined. In just a few months. Wow. Embarrassing.
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/...orkers-long-covid-are-being-dismissed/620801/
It seems that health care workers do not like being treated like they treat patients. Some also seem concerned that once they become patients, everything they say is dismissed as irrelevant. They do not seem to enjoy being on the other side of that experience. Much to learn here.
When one journalist genuinely understands more about a disease than 99.99% of medicine combined. In just a few months. Wow. Embarrassing.
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/...orkers-long-covid-are-being-dismissed/620801/
But these problems are familiar to people who have myalgic encephalomyelitis, the debilitating condition that’s also called chronic fatigue syndrome. Physiotherapists with ME/CFS reached out to Oller and Brown and told them that their symptom had a name: post-exertional malaise. It’s the hallmark of ME/CFS and, as that community learned the hard way, if you have it, exercise can make symptoms significantly worse.
...
Long COVID has forced many of the health-care workers I interviewed to confront their own past. They worried about whether they, too, dismissed patients in need. “There’s been a lot of Did I do this?” Clare Rayner told me, referring to the discussion in her Facebook group. “And many have said, I did. They’re really ashamed about it.” Amy Small, a general practitioner based in Lothian, Scotland, admitted to me that she used to think ME/CFS symptoms could be addressed through “the right therapy.” But when Small got long COVID herself, some light work left her bed bound for 10 days; sometimes, she could barely raise a glass to her mouth. “It was a whole level of bodily dysfunction that I didn’t know could happen until I experienced it myself,” she said, and it helped her “understand what so many of my patients had experienced for years.”
...
Long COVID has forced many of the health-care workers I interviewed to confront their own past. They worried about whether they, too, dismissed patients in need. “There’s been a lot of Did I do this?” Clare Rayner told me, referring to the discussion in her Facebook group. “And many have said, I did. They’re really ashamed about it.” Amy Small, a general practitioner based in Lothian, Scotland, admitted to me that she used to think ME/CFS symptoms could be addressed through “the right therapy.” But when Small got long COVID herself, some light work left her bed bound for 10 days; sometimes, she could barely raise a glass to her mouth. “It was a whole level of bodily dysfunction that I didn’t know could happen until I experienced it myself,” she said, and it helped her “understand what so many of my patients had experienced for years.”