12/04/2022
2 YEARS AGO TODAY… I was discharged after a week in the hospital battling Covid-19. I’ve spent the past 2 years continually fighting to recover. Every day. All day. I don’t have a choice. I hope one day to be able to lift my camera again without getting short of breath. To look at my computer screen without getting headaches and nauseous. To take my dog for a walk. Go out to dinner with my wife. To sit upright for a full hour without getting fatigued and short of breath. If you’ve wondered where I’ve been or why I haven’t posted much new content… this is why.
Not enough is known or discussed about the aftermath of Covid. Research is still ongoing. Treatment is very limited. Awareness is severely lacking. Yet there are roughly 25-30 million people in the US who suffer from extended, limiting, and even fully debilitating symptoms due to Long Covid.
The government calls it PASC. People tend to call it Long Covid. Those who have it are generally called Long Haulers. It affects people who were hospitalized like me, and even people who were only ever asymptomatic. Sometimes symptoms never go away, other times they inexplicably return (or begin) months after infection.
It’s a multi system scourge. Leading research points to a few likely Covid-triggered conditions such as: damage from inflammation, autonomic nervous system dysfunction, autoimmune response, viral persistence, and possibly even micro clots, small vessel disease, and/or nerve damage throughout the entire body brought on by the ravages of the virus. The most recent studies indicate there is some interplay between these leading theories, as so much is highly interconnected within the body.
Per recent data the more times you get Covid, the greater the likelihood of becoming a Long Hauler. And the risk unfortunately remains even with newer variants.
It’s a humanitarian, employment, and economic time bomb that very few are discussing, yet are a looming disaster as we try to claw our way out of the pandemic and it’s economic and social impacts. But it’s real. I’m one of them.
Awareness is crucial. If you didn’t know about it before, then now you know too.