Conceptualising the episodic nature of disability among adults living with Long COVID: a qualitative study

Author:

O’Brien Kelly KORCID,Brown Darren AORCID,McDuff Kiera,St. Clair-Sullivan NatalieORCID,Solomon PatriciaORCID,Chan Carusone SooORCID,McCorkell LisaORCID,Wei HannahORCID,Goulding Susie,O'Hara MargaretORCID,Thomson Catherine,Roche Niamh,Stokes Ruth,Vera Jaime HORCID,Erlandson Kristine MORCID,Bergin ColmORCID,Robinson LarryORCID,Cheung Angela MORCID,Torres Brittany,Avery LisaORCID,Bannan CiaranORCID,Harding RichardORCID

Abstract

IntroductionOur aim was to describe episodic nature of disability among adults living with Long COVID.MethodsWe conducted a community-engaged qualitative descriptive study involving online semistructured interviews and participant visual illustrations. We recruited participants via collaborator community organisations in Canada, Ireland, UK and USA.We recruited adults who self-identified as living with Long COVID with diversity in age, gender, race/ethnicity, sexual orientation and duration since initial COVID infection between December 2021 and May 2022. We used a semistructured interview guide to explore experiences of disability living with Long COVID, specifically health-related challenges and how they were experienced over time. We asked participants to draw their health trajectory and conducted a group-based content analysis.ResultsAmong the 40 participants, the median age was 39 years (IQR: 32–49); majority were women (63%), white (73%), heterosexual (75%) and living with Long COVID for ≥1 year (83%). Participants described their disability experiences as episodic in nature, characterised by fluctuations in presence and severity of health-related challenges (disability) that may occur both within a day and over the long-term living with Long COVID. They described living with ‘ups and downs’, ‘flare-ups’ and ‘peaks’ followed by ‘crashes’, ‘troughs’ and ‘valleys’, likened to a ‘yo-yo’, ‘rolling hills’ and ‘rollercoaster ride’ with ‘relapsing/remitting’, ‘waxing/waning’, ‘fluctuations’ in health. Drawn illustrations demonstrated variety of trajectories across health dimensions, some more episodic than others. Uncertainty intersected with the episodic nature of disability, characterised as unpredictability of episodes, their length, severity and triggers, and process of long-term trajectory, which had implications on broader health.ConclusionAmong this sample of adults living with Long COVID, experiences of disability were described as episodic, characterised by fluctuating health challenges, which may be unpredictable in nature. Results can help to better understand experiences of disability among adults living with Long COVID to inform healthcare and rehabilitation.

Funder

Canada Research Chairs

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

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