Our Long COVID program has been open 10 months now. I've seen over 150 patients in that time, with new referrals booking well into February 2023.
I've had to stop accepting other internal medicine referrals, just so I can keep up with the demand, the follow ups, the downstream effect.
What I've learned... There are definite patterns. Dysautonomia/POTS. Cognitive dysfunction and brain fog. PEM (post exertional malaise). Unexplained rashes. Muscles feeling like cement. Migraines. Chest pain. So much chest pain. Shortness of breath.
Who I've seen.... Humans of all ages. 21 through 87. All demographics. Previously healthy. Previously not healthy. Teachers and healthcare workers. So many teachers and healthcare workers. Athletes. Non athletes.
It's non-discrimnatory.
How my clinical process has evolved.... Pre-appt screening tests, quality of life scores, functional assessment scores. During appointment visual aids to help understand possible pathophysiology.
Comprehensive educational documentation with personalized recommendations for each patient as info is often overwhelming, esp with brain fog.
Treatment aimed at both "Band-Aid toolbox" to help quality of life and "Root cause" looking at immunomodulation, anti-inflammation.
Nursing and physician check ins. Regularly. Reflective listening, validation, and commiseration. Continuously reading, searching, hoping to find next breakthrough or tool that can be used.
Pages and pages of forms, minimizing my judgement, experience and clinical knowledge.
Fighting tooth and nail to have claim adjusters understand that "pushing through" and excessive functional assessments for the patient is contraindicated in patients with long COVID and ME/CFS.
And through all of this, trying to manage my own long COVID experience. Which has required pacing, reinvention of my chart note template to help cue the next question I was supposed to ask.
I let my patients know at the beginning of their long covid assessment, that the 90 minutes allotted is not only for them, but for me... As I will undoubtedly require the time and space to fully stay on task.
The 15 minute buffers I have to place throughout my day to regain the line of questioning and follow through needed that comes with each individual's Long COVID story.
10 months in, some of my patients have been able to be discharged, feeling almost close to pre -COVID health. Some have gotten COVID again, which worsens their symptoms and we start everything from scratch.
But the vast majority of Long COVID patients are in this purgatory. Not knowing which way their life is going to go. Is this the best it's going to be? Am I one illness away from going back to where I started? Will I be able to work again?
Will I feel normal again?
After 2.5 years, we have only begun to scratch the surface of Long COVID, and understand its impact on individuals. I fear we will continue to underestimate its impact on our province, our nation and truly the world.
Edited: thank you for the shares and the comments. Couple of common questions came up, I'll try to address, with the disclaimer that this is not medical advice, & while experiential medicine is important, I am very clear with my patients about risk vs benefit in any intervention.
1. What treatments am I recommending?
If dysautonomia/POTS- common known tx: fluids, electrolytes, beta blockers, ivabradine (the latter often comes with cost / coverage barrier).
Fatigue/inflammatory symptoms: antihistamines (Blexten, rupall); LDN (low dose naltrexone)
Other treatments usually based on symptoms - vitamin deficiency replacement, mood support (ADHD, depression), inhalers, anti-inflammatories, and much much more.
Non pharmacological - rehabilitation (with the right team that understands CFS), acupuncture, counseling / CBT.
2. Vax vs unvaxxed - remember, this is a small sample size. Purely anecdotal. Those that got COVID in 2020 prior to vaccine being available (in my cohort) show far more debilitating and severe long COVID than those with even one dose. Vaccinated individuals can still get LC.
Unvaxxed appears to have worse symptomatology (again. Only in what I am seeing, this is not the same as a robust study that will be needed in general for LC).
3. This sounds like many other autoimmune, post-infectious syndromes that many suffer from:
I agree. I am hopeful that that attention being given to LC, the subsequent research and treatment guidelines - will help a far larger population of patients who have been ill for so long.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
As we continue to see the decimation of healthcare in AB, we should anticipate more and more physicians needing to take leaves due to stress and burn out.
Every week, we hear about family physicians closing their practice, due to burn out, unsustainability of keeping up with the cost of practice, and the moral injury that we all feel of "failing our patients."
Making the decision to close or take a break is not an easy one. Physicians know how much the public relies on them for their care- be it acute care, prevention, mental health, and navigation of social stressors.
For the first time in my own career as an internal med doc, I've seen the day where my colleagues can no longer safely admit patients from the ER.
We've talked about healthcare collapse a number of times over the years and I think it's important that collapse looks and feels different depending on where in the puzzle your piece fits.
For the patient, it's not getting timely testing, timely results or having a family physician. It means waiting in the ED waiting room for 36 hours before being seen. It means being subjected to procedures and patient care in the middle of the hallway with no privacy or dignity.
I've been pretty quiet on here for many reasons - self-preservation, trying to regain control in areas of my life, and simply put - healthcare still is in crisis and posting about it felt a bit like Groundhog's Day.
But I think it's time to speak up again as the hospital system has hit a tipping point. As we head into a long weekend in the middle of a respiratory virus surge after 3 years of absolutely no meaningful help from our leaders, brace for a collapse of epic proportions.
Am I being hyperbolic? No. I wish I could bring you all along inside the hospital, inside the discussions and panicked calls about how we will manage these volumes. There are zero solutions. Just the same pleas "please take more. Please admit. Please just figure it out."
It's been a minute since I've posted and I'm not entirely sure if I'll fully be back. But something happened today that restored faith in humanity.
I was at the grocery store, last minute shopping before school starts, and when it comes time to pay, I realize my wallet isn't in my purse. The worst feeling ever, especially with a big line forming.
An incredibly kind human behind me says "I'll pay for you."
I'm dumbfounded. She proceeds to say she follows me on social media and wanted to thank me.
Incredible piece by my colleague, @gabefabreau on the healthcare crisis. The frustration we feel knowing there is no hope or solution on the horizon, when we are told to do more, provide more. In my career, I've never felt so ready to move on from a profession I love.
Like so many of my colleagues, the "need to fix" part of my soul won't allow me to quit just yet, but the grit and grind that was once there is merely dust, held together by the collective strength of my fellow GIM colleagues.
It's been a week since we heard the healthcare crisis is under control in Alberta.
In that week, we have SIGNIFICANTLY surpassed our capacity each day, with no space on our wards to admit patients to.
We continue to have significant EIPs (admitted patients stuck in ED since no beds upstairs), patients in over capacity spaces (read: hallways, extra "beds" in the corners of already crowded rooms) with no plan to reabsorb into funded spaces.
And our docs... Our docs... Being asked to admit and care for patients well beyond safe numbers. WELL BEYOND.
With no plan on how to support us. To provide us the resources we need to care for our patients in a way that is both effective and SAFE.