This Podcast Will Kill You: Season 7, Episode 1
Audio (1h 30m) | Transcript | About
Audio (1h 30m) | Transcript | About
Erin Welsh, PhD is a disease ecologist and epidemiologist now working full-time as a science communicator through her work on This Podcast Will Kill You.
Erin Allmann Updyke, MD, PhD is an epidemiologist and disease ecologist currently in a medical residency program to complete her training.
In this episode, we explore how the concept of Long Covid was defined by those who experience it, who also continue to advocate for better treatment, more research, and real compassion from medical professionals. We examine what we currently know about the biology of this condition, and delve into some of the most promising research avenues that may give us a greater understanding of or ability to treat Long Covid. This story is still being written, but already it can tell us so much about our concepts of infectious disease and how the medical system treats those with “invisible” illness.
So we're starting with long COVID, this post viral syndrome that has emerged and made a lot of headlines over the past few years. And I think it's going to be a really interesting exploration of a topic where our knowledge is evolving very rapidly and has evolved very rapidly over the course of just a few years. And we're gonna kind of follow this up next week with an episode on myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome because there are, as you'll learn, a lot of parallels, a lot of similarities between these two conditions.
There are so many lessons that we should learn about long COVID, like how much we still don't know about viral infections and our immune response to them. How our measurements of disease are inadequate, a lot of the time splitting it into does it kill you or not? Like that's not necessarily a very helpful metric. The power of patient activism and how the medical system fails people who don't fall into tidy disease categories or respond to disease in any way outside of what is expected. How are political... There's more. How our political and medical infrastructure does not provide adequate support for people with poorly understood chronic diseases. How popular media representation of science as full of certainty creates unrealistic expectations and erodes public trust. Obviously there's a lot that we could cover.