Opinion piece in the BMJ
Conclusion
Going forward, we recommend:
Acknowledging that patients with long term conditions may experience challenging forms of “identity loss” which may lead them to feel more vulnerable.
Addressing stigma in healthcare as well as in communities and workplaces, recognising that experiences of stigma are not always visible.
Considering that stigma may have cumulative negative effects on recovery and may be more pronounced among already disadvantaged communities; that stigmatised groups may be less likely to seek support as a result of systemic bias.
Approaching long covid from an integrated mind-body lens (as Ballering et al. suggest), believing the lived experience of patients and avoiding the discarding of somatic symptoms as psychological.12
Encouraging existing and new support groups to focus on effective ways of fostering positive identities, with a focus on the most vulnerable communities.
Conducting interdisciplinary research where patients, social psychologists, epidemiologists, sociologists, clinicians, healthcare and public health practitioners, and those from the medical humanities, work together to understand long covid holistically, as insights can inform interventions that enhance positive social identities.
Competing interests: All authors have lived experience of long covid.
https://www.bmj.com/content/375/bmj.n2933.long
Conclusion
Going forward, we recommend:
Acknowledging that patients with long term conditions may experience challenging forms of “identity loss” which may lead them to feel more vulnerable.
Addressing stigma in healthcare as well as in communities and workplaces, recognising that experiences of stigma are not always visible.
Considering that stigma may have cumulative negative effects on recovery and may be more pronounced among already disadvantaged communities; that stigmatised groups may be less likely to seek support as a result of systemic bias.
Approaching long covid from an integrated mind-body lens (as Ballering et al. suggest), believing the lived experience of patients and avoiding the discarding of somatic symptoms as psychological.12
Encouraging existing and new support groups to focus on effective ways of fostering positive identities, with a focus on the most vulnerable communities.
Conducting interdisciplinary research where patients, social psychologists, epidemiologists, sociologists, clinicians, healthcare and public health practitioners, and those from the medical humanities, work together to understand long covid holistically, as insights can inform interventions that enhance positive social identities.
Competing interests: All authors have lived experience of long covid.
https://www.bmj.com/content/375/bmj.n2933.long