Mental health impact of Long Covid
We asked young people with Long Covid and parents caring for young people with Long Covid about the emotional impact it has had on their...
Daily family life at home was being substantially affected by having a family member with Long Covid. The families we talked to described challenging situations and changes to their daily routines. Here we discuss changes to:
The parents we spoke with often discussed how they had to reduce their activities to the ‘essentials’ of running a home, namely getting meals on the table, the washing done, and doing the school run. For many parents, feeling able to cook was their benchmark. This was more challenging for families spread across multiple households, or where there was a sole parent looking after young children.
Mealtimes had substantially changed for many families. People we talked to worried that their meals had become ‘less healthy’ because they could not prepare food from scratch and relied more on convenience foods. Teenagers James and William said that their older brother had taken on a lot of the cooking, and had to learn fairly quickly. Others had extended family or neighbours helping out with meals. Ada’s mother-law took on much of the cooking while she was most unwell.
Families talked about how they had reconfigured or adapted household spaces to help manage their Long Covid at home. This included making spaces safer, minimising noise, and trying different sleeping arrangements. This was more difficult for families living in small homes or with larger families, see ‘Self-management and self-care of Long Covid at home’.
Michelle, whose young son also has Long Covid, said, “our house is heavily adapted. To get me from the kitchen to the lounge I’ve got two touchpoints in the hallway.” This was particularly challenging if the house had more than one level, as people often found it difficult to manage stairs. Michelle summarised, “once you’re downstairs, you’re downstairs, and once you’re upstairs, you’re upstairs.” Access to the bathroom was another issue. People were using wheelchairs to get around had often found that there were areas of the home that were no longer accessible. Jana had shifted her son, who was using a wheelchair, from sharing a bedroom with his older brother to sleeping in the living room. This helped to minimise disruption while his brother was sitting exams.
Sasha’s young daughter was sleeping in her mother’s bed so that she could be attended to at night if needed. Some parents with Long Covid had temporarily moved into a spare bedroom so they could get some rest. Clearly, this was not an option for those who did not have a spare bedroom. Rosie, who shares a room with her 14 year old sister, often has the lights in her room turned down low or on green, which she said was supposed to be good for headaches. She thought her sister had found it ‘strange’.
Some parents were particularly worried about keeping themselves and their families safe while dealing with Long Covid symptoms such as brain fog. Razia burned her wrist on the kettle, saying “anyone in their right mind would know that if you’ve put the kettle on, it’s going to get hot.”
Lucy B told us that she was careful to only take a shower when there was someone else in the house to help, if needed.
Many families had experienced changes to the caring dynamics within their families, and missed spending time with their children. Some parents with Long Covid, like Ayesha and Charlotte, found it difficult to care for their children while they were unwell with Long Covid, and felt like they were absent from their children’s lives. For more discussion of caring and family activities, see ‘Changes to caring roles’ and ‘Family, Fun and Social Life’.
People with Long Covid found it difficult to stay involved in family life and activities. Parents talked about missing milestones with their children. Both Ada and Golda said it was difficult to be the parents they wanted to be for their children. Children with Long Covid also said that they missed their family time.
We asked young people with Long Covid and parents caring for young people with Long Covid about the emotional impact it has had on their...
Here we outline how Long Covid has caused changes to caring roles, as families have had to adapt to the changing care needs of family...