Guardian: Childhood, interrupted: 12-year-old Toby’s life with long Covid
More than 110,000 children in England and Scotland are still suffering. For Toby, it has meant pain, crushing fatigue and sadness – as well as months off school
Another in the Guardian's LC Series.
More than 110,000 children in England and Scotland are still suffering. For Toby, it has meant pain, crushing fatigue and sadness – as well as months off school
Another in the Guardian's LC Series.
Toby has an older sister, Isabel, 15, who also has long Covid, although she’s now doing better; they reckon she is about 85% recovered. She’s at school today (and anyway, she’s quite private and way too cool to want to be in the paper with her family).
Toby’s having a good day. He even went to school. “I haven’t really been in for the last two or three months, but the last two weeks I’ve gone in during the lunchtime. Not to go into any lesson but for form time.” What was it like? Was it good to see people? “It was amazing,” he smiles, especially to see his best mate, Louis, even if he does see Louis most days online – they play Minecraft together.
A couple of days later I’m back in touch with Sarah and Simon, by email. I meant to ask them for a pre-Covid photo of Toby. They tell me he has had a big crash since our interview: heart rate variability right down, resting heart rate up, he’s floppy, on the sofa, not doing much.
I feel responsible – the interview was too much for Toby. “We thought he was well enough to do 20 minutes of school AND a chat, but we were wrong,” writes Sarah. “We have to make these micro-decisions every single day and we’re never going to get them all right. We have to not beat ourselves up when we don’t. His symptoms seem to be changing and we’re completely stumped as to what’s going on now.”