Realisation of Long Covid
Here we describe how the people we spoke to realised that one of their family members had Long Covid. This section includes the experiences of...
We asked young people with Long Covid and parents caring for young people with Long Covid about talking to others about their symptoms. Some of these parents also have Long Covid themselves.
In this section we cover:
● Talking to health professionals
● Talking to friends, family, and other people
As a new condition, people found it challenging to talk about Long Covid with others. Many parents we talked to said that they had encountered health professionals who were dismissive of their child’s symptoms and suggested that their symptoms were ‘made up’, exaggerated or were psychological or anxiety-related rather than Long Covid. Sometimes people said the situation wasn’t helped if: testing wasn’t available around the time their child caught Covid, if they returned a negative test, or if they didn’t test positive for antibodies, or before Long Covid was a recognised condition.
Jasmine, Sasha and others had felt frustrated when symptoms were dismissed as anxiety or another diagnosis.
During their encounters with health professionals, some parents of young people with Long Covid told us that they felt they were being judged negatively as “hypochondriacs,” being “overprotective” or even that they might have “Munchausen by proxy” (when a parent or carer exaggerates or deliberately causes symptoms of illness in the child).
To hear more from people talking about experiences with health professionals, see Consultations with GPs, Consultations with specialists and Long Covid clinics.
People had mixed thoughts about telling friends and family about the Long Covid. Not everyone who was told about the illness appeared to believe them, or behaved in a nice, understanding manner. Gracie recognised that it could be hard for family living far away to understand Long Covid when she only visited on “a good day.” Deidre’s close friends believed her daughter had Long Covid when they saw her deteriorate.
Because it is new and can be an invisible illness (where it is not always obvious that someone is ill), struggling to understand Long Covid was a common reaction. Some parents described feeling ‘invisible’ and said that people didn’t speak to them in public anymore.
Charlotte, a parent with Long Covid, explained, “people will talk to my husband and not to me. You don’t feel like the same person anymore. It’s as though you’re a child. I feel like a child in a pram. That’s the feeling I get like they’re talking to my parent.”
People we talked to were aware that some people did not believe that they really had Long Covid (see Impact on Relationships).
Raising awareness of Long Covid in children mattered to some of the people we talked to, although Evie said that she has given up talking to her friends about it. Abigail always told people she had Long Covid because “it’s new and if people don’t know about these things, how are we going to learn?”
Harry said that the attendance lady at his school had been “really interested and supportive,” whereas Amira said that her teachers didn’t believe her and thought she just didn’t want to go to school. For more information on talking to schools, see ‘School and Long Covid’.
To hear more people speaking about postural tachycardia syndrome (PoTS – an abnormal increase in heart rate that occurs after sitting up or standing), see ‘Symptoms and changing symptoms of Long Covid’.
It was sometimes challenging for parents to explain why they were unwell to their children. Kate had come up with a way of talking with her young son about her illness, who tries to be supportive ‘in his own way’.
Here we describe how the people we spoke to realised that one of their family members had Long Covid. This section includes the experiences of...
The topics covered in this section include: Common symptoms Changes in symptoms Younger children’s symptoms Common symptoms In this section we explore the most common...