Wilhelmina Jenkins
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Thank you!
Time has shared the article on social media. They have 12 million followers on FB and 8 million followers on Twitter, so do give a thumbs up and retweet those who canSo good to see this important issue covered in TIME. Excellent advocacy once again from Wilhelmina Jenkins!
TIME: Black Women Fighting For Recognition as Long COVID Patients
Quotes:
It took five years of chronic pain, nausea, fuzzy thoughts and a cruel mixture of fatigue and insomnia for Wilhelmina Jenkins to be diagnosed with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). But even after she received that diagnosis, in 1988, she faced her fair share of doubters—not because her symptoms didn’t meet the bar for diagnosis, but because she is Black.
At that time, researchers mistakenly thought ME/CFS, a syndrome that sometimes follows a viral illness and leads to long-term pain, fatigue and other symptoms that can last decades, primarily affected upper-class white women. It was pejoratively labeled “yuppie flu,” and many doctors believed it to be psychosomatic.
....
When COVID-19 hit last year, and case clusters began popping up in Black communities, Jenkins, now 71, braced herself for another fight. She knew that, since ME/CFS can follow viral illnesses, COVID-19 could be a mass trigger. She also knew that, particularly in communities of color, many patients would have no idea why they weren’t getting better after a couple weeks. “I knew they were not going to be reached,” she says.
She ended up being right on both counts.
---His impression is that people who had a particularly high level of
physical ability, such as sports people or marathon runners, seem to
be “inordinately affected”. This may be because they have very high
expectation of their health, having never been ill before.
That is not dissimilar to findings of persisting symptoms among
patients with other infectious diseases, says de Barra.
“Type A personality predisposes them, either because they have those
expectations of their functionality and they really find it hard that
they were sick and it’s going to take time to get better, or the
psychological overlap that might occur with that.”
"Part of the assessment at the clinic is a six-minute walk test,
during which a patient’s heart rate and oxygen are checked. This has
revealed a “profound” level of deconditioning.
“We need to think about rehabilitation very early with these patients.
I think that is what we learnt from the first wave.”
“Type A personality predisposes them, either because they have those
expectations of their functionality and they really find it hard that
they were sick and it’s going to take time to get better, or the
psychological overlap that might occur with that.”
"You want to recover too much and too fast and that's why you didn't recover, you believe in yourself too much"I like it how type A personality is a predisposing factor, with too high expectations of their own recovery time. But also another predisposing factor is the type who often visits the doctor, thinks a lot about their symptoms and has apparently too low expectations of their recovery. I always wonder what personality type is NOT a predisposing factor because you can put an awful lot of people in these two categories if you really want to.
Sadly this is paywalled but I would really love to read this. Does anyone have access the text?The Irish Times: Irish hospital doctors on long Covid: Athletic people are ‘inordinately affected’
Irish hospital doctors on long Covid: Athletic people are ‘inordinately affected’ (via @IrishTimes) https://www.irishtimes.com/life-and...ic-people-are-inordinately-affected-1.4530174
Dr. Killian Murphy seems to throw out every cliché imaginable.
Sorry Grigor, normally they let you read a few articles for free every week, but this one seems to be subscriber only.Sadly this is paywalled but I would really love to read this. Does anyone have access the text?
However, the “good thing is most people we saw at three months had recovered very well”, said Hurley. But they did see others who were readmitted to the hospital with continuing lung problems, breathing problems and about five per cent were diagnosed in the hospital or afterwards with blood clotting in the lung.
Fatigue is a common element for people who had Covid in the community, Hurley says.
“Shortness of breath is a big problem for patients, even young patients.”
Part of the assessment at the clinic is a six-minute walk test, during which a patient’s heart rate and oxygen are checked. This has revealed a “profound” level of deconditioning.
Use of an extensive questionnaire at the Beaumont clinic found that 30 to 40 per cent of those attending had mental health issues, such as anxiety and depression. While this could be true for anybody spending a long spell in hospital, “it is a big number of people” according to Hurley.
Rather than having patients “being referred here, there and everywhere” through lots of specialities, as is currently happening, says de Barra, the health system needs a framework whereby they will be “funnelled into a truly multidisciplinary clinic”.
His impression is that people who had a particularly high level of physical ability, such as sports people or marathon runners, seem to be “inordinately affected”. This may be because they have very high expectation of their health, having never been ill before.
That is not dissimilar to findings of persisting symptoms among patients with other infectious diseases, says de Barra.
“Type A personality predisposes them, either because they have those expectations of their functionality and they really find it hard that they were sick and it’s going to take time to get better, or the psychological overlap that might occur with that.”
A mismatch between the severity of symptoms and the findings of clinical investigations is the characteristic feature of long Covid, says Dr Liam Townsend, a specialist registrar in infectious diseases at St James’s Hospital and research fellow at Trinity College Dublin.
“If you were treating a computer you would say they’re fine, as their results look all right but the patient in front of you actually isn’t. That makes it quite difficult even from a triaging perspective.”
“We will need a truly multidisciplinary approach,” he says, including physio and occupational therapy and clinical psychology. He refers to a recent UK study that found depression and post traumatic stress disorder were very common and again this was not related to severity of infection.
Mention of clinical psychology might make patients think the medics believe it’s all in their head, he says.
“But no that’s not the case, there are so many factors.”
“There is no good screening tool; it is very much based on functional performance and subjective health.”
“There is nothing I can actually give these patients except listen and reassure that this is the trajectory.”
Investigations are done to make sure they’re not missing anything, says Townsend, adding: “We are all still slowly learning”.
It's more the active and hostile opposition than lack of support, but they compound. If only all we suffered is lack of support, things wouldn't have been so bad. The lies. The lies! So many lies. And they're mostly not even credible, to add more insult.millions of people have suffered from similar chronic illnesses for decades with little support
https://twitter.com/bmj_latest/status/1380830468816392194
AGENDA
4.00 Welcome Fi Godlee (The BMJ)
MC Phil Hammond (Private Eye)
4.05 ‘What is 'long covid'/ post-covid?
(Chair: George Davey Smith, University of Bristol)
- Elaine Maxwell (NIHR)
- Jo House (University of Bristol) on patient perspectives
- Laura Spinney (science journalist and author) on the longterm health effects of 1918 ('Spanish@ flu
4.25 International Experience: What and where are the best data?
(Chair: Fi Godlee BMJ)
- Ben Humberstone and Daniel Ayoubkhani (ONS) : UK
- Simone Benatti : Italy
(see also Maxime Taquet in the next session)
4.50 Prognosis/available treatments and rehabilitation
(Chair: Allyson Pollock, Newcastle University)
- Melissa Heightman (UCL) on clinician service development
- Maxime Taquet (Oxford University) on the US data
- Margaret McCartney (GP) and Richard Byng (GP) on the primary care perspective
- Liz Whittaker (Imperial) on children and the CLOCK study
- Rob Barker Davis (British Army) on the value of exercise
5.45 Discussion and questions (chair: Phil Hammond)
-All panelists
6.15 Close