Dolphin
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Rehabilitation providers’ experiences with long COVID care in Canada: a qualitative study
Jaylyn Leighton, Isabel Heldmann, Kate Van de Ven, Logan Reis, Abirami Vijayakumar, Robert Simpson, Michelle LA Nelson, Christine Sheppard, Lawrence (Larry) Robinson, Rosalie Steinberg, Melody Nguyen, Mark Bayley, Nick Daneman, Charissa Levy, Chester Ho, Susie Goulding, Sander L. Hitzig & Marina B. Wasilewski
To cite this article:
Jaylyn Leighton, Isabel Heldmann, Kate Van de Ven, Logan Reis, Abirami Vijayakumar, Robert Simpson, Michelle LA Nelson, Christine Sheppard, Lawrence (Larry) Robinson, Rosalie Steinberg, Melody Nguyen, Mark Bayley, Nick Daneman, Charissa Levy, Chester Ho, Susie Goulding, Sander L. Hitzig & Marina B. Wasilewski (02 Dec 2025): Rehabilitation providers’ experiences with long COVID care in Canada: a qualitative study, Disability and Rehabilitation, DOI: 10.1080/09638288.2025.2583734
Abstract
Purpose
To examine the experiences, challenges, and recommendations of Canadian Rehabilitation Providers delivering care to people with Long COVID (PWLC), with the goal of informing best practices and guiding service and policy improvements.Materials and Methods
A qualitative descriptive study was conducted using semi-structured interviews with 32 Rehabilitation Providers from multiple disciplines and provinces across Canada. Participants were purposively sampled and interviewed between April 2022 and January 2023. Data were analyzed using codebook thematic analysis, incorporating inter-coder and inter-rater agreement and reflexivity practices.Results
Three central themes emerged: (1) Providers faced substantial barriers, including limited infrastructure, resource constraints, and misinformation about Long COVID; (2) In the absence of formal guidelines, providers adapted their practices through individualized care planning, trial-and-error, and peer learning; and (3) Participants emphasized key components of effective rehabilitation, such as validating patient experiences, promoting self-management and pacing, integrating caregiver support, facilitating peer connections, and fostering inter-professional collaboration.Conclusion
Rehabilitation Providers have been critical in addressing the evolving needs of PWLC despite inadequate systemic support. Their insights point to the need for coordinated, interdisciplinary, and patient-centered care models, alongside investment in professional training, system infrastructure, and integrated policy responses for current and future post-viral conditions.IMPLICATIONS OF REHABILITATION
- Rehabilitation professionals are recommending individualized and flexible care approaches focused on symptom validation and energy conservation, due to the diverse and unpredictable nature of Long COVID.
- In the absence of formal guidelines, rehabilitation professionals have adapted practices in real time, emphasizing the urgent need for standardized, evidence-informed Long COVID rehabilitation frameworks
- Effective Long COVID rehabilitation includes patient and caregiver education, integration of peer support, and the promotion of self-management strategies to enhance recovery and reduce isolation.
- Interdisciplinary collaboration and system-level integration are critical to ensure continuity of care and to build sustainable rehabilitation pathways for emerging chronic conditions like Long COVID.
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