(Press-News.org) Freelance journalist Adele Waters speaks to scores of doctors unable to work or play with their children, forced to sell their homes or facing financial destitution by an illness they caught while doing their jobs.
She hears of “shockingly low” access to protective equipment faced by many doctors in their workplaces, and how some have struggled for medical colleagues to take their symptoms seriously.
Charities that provide financial support to doctors in need have seen a sudden rise in demand, and now there are calls for long covid to be considered an occupational disease to help doctors and other healthcare workers access support and financial aid.
Long covid is an umbrella term for a range of symptoms - from fatigue and respiratory problems to heart palpitations and joint pain - that last longer than four weeks after an acute covid-19 infection and are not explained by an alternative diagnosis.
There are no precise figures for how many healthcare workers are affected, but estimates suggest that up to 4.41% (one in 25) have acquired long covid.
Long Covid Doctors For Action (LCD4A) is a support network campaigning for greater recognition of long covid and its impact on doctors’ health and careers.
Members include doctors who have been dismissed by their employer on capability grounds, those who have applied for ill health retirement decades early, and others who have lost their places on training programmes.
Last year, the British Medical Association (BMA) joined forces with LCD4A to survey doctors with the condition.
Of 603 doctors who responded, almost one in five (18%) were no longer able to work. While more than half (57%) worked full time before the onset of their covid illness, by the time of the survey count that proportion had dropped to one in three (31%). Nearly half (49%) of respondents had lost income because of long covid.
Both the BMA and LCD4A have set out five demands, including greater workplace protection for healthcare staff, better support for sufferers to return to work safely, and a call for long covid to be considered an occupational disease to help doctors and other healthcare workers access support and financial aid.
In March, the Trade Union Congress made the same call and in November 2022 the Industrial Injuries Advisory Council, which advises the government on which diseases should be classified as work related, recommended that health workers with long covid be able to claim industrial injuries benefit, notes Waters.
But there is no sign yet that such a move is on the cards.
The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) told The BMJ it recognises that long covid can have a debilitating impact on people but adds: “The evidence in relation to making long covid an occupational disease is at present insufficient, given continuing uncertainties around its definition, fluctuating nature and range of symptoms.”
A spokesperson for the DHSC said: “We are backing our world-leading scientists with over £50 million to better understand the long-term effects of this virus and make treatments available.
“NHS staff are able to seek support for long covid from their GP or one of the 100 specialist clinics available nationwide. The NHS has also committed £314 million to support people with ongoing symptoms of long covid.”
But for doctors such as Kelly Fearnley, who co-founded LCD4A after long covid left her unable to work, that simply is not good enough. “After risking our lives to save others, now disabled, we are being managed out of the door with no support system in place,” she says.
“I contracted this illness caring for covid positive patients because my employer failed to provide me with adequate respiratory protective equipment. There should be more of an effort to support healthcare workers. At a time when the country needed us, we stepped up, and it's not right now that in our time of need the country steps away.”
END
Doctors with long covid deserve more support
Doctors who risked their lives for others say “we’ve been left to rot” Calls for long covid to be recognized as an occupational illness
2023-09-21
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Study shows morning and afternoon slightly better than evening physical activity for diabetes prevention
2023-09-21
New research published in Diabetologia (the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes [EASD]) shows that morning and afternoon physical activity are associated with a lower risk of developing type 2 diabetes across all population levels of education and income, but found no statistically significant association between evening physical activity and risk type 2 diabetes. The study is by Dr Caiwei Tian, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA, and Dr Chirag Patel, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA. and colleagues.
Physical activity is a preventive factor for type 2 diabetes, but its timing and consistency (in contrast with overall sum of physical activity) ...
Monkeys cause a stink in response to human noise
2023-09-21
New research has found that monkeys increase their use of scent markings to compensate for human noise pollution.
Pied tamarins (Saguinus bicolor) use both vocal calls and scent markings to communicate, and the new study – published in the journal Ethology Ecology & Evolution – is the first to investigate how primates change their communication strategies in response to noise pollution.
The pied tamarin has an extremely narrow geographic range in central Brazil, much of which now lies within the city of ...
Prostate cancer upgrade, downgrade rates in PI-RADS 2.0 versus 2.1
2023-09-20
Leesburg, VA, September 20, 2023—According to an accepted manuscript published in the American Journal of Roentgenology (AJR), upgrade and downgrade rates from targeted biopsy to radical prostatectomy were not significantly different between patients whose MRI examinations were clinically interpreted using PI-RADS Version v2.0 or v2.1.
“Implementation of the most recent PI-RADS update did not improve the incongruence in prostate cancer grade assessment between targeted biopsy and surgery,” wrote corresponding author Baris Turkbey, MD, from the Molecular Imaging Branch ...
New recycling method fights plastic waste
2023-09-20
Almost 80% of plastic in the waste stream ends up in landfills or accumulates in the environment. Oak Ridge National Laboratory scientists have developed a technology that converts a conventionally unrecyclable mixture of plastic waste into useful chemicals, presenting a new strategy in the toolkit to combat global plastic waste.
The technology, invented by ORNL’s Tomonori Saito and former postdoctoral researcher Md Arifuzzaman, uses an exceptionally efficient organocatalyst that allows selective deconstruction ...
Low follow-up kidney testing after hospital discharge with moderate to severe AKI
2023-09-20
A study of Canadian hospitalizations from 2007-2019 show that over 75% of patients with moderate to severe acute kidney injury (AKI) do not get appropriate follow-up kidney health testing after hospital discharge.
A study in Alberta, Canada, examined care received by over 20,000 hospitalized with AKI during hospitalization and after discharge between 2009 and 2017. The results, recently published in the American Journal of Kidney Diseases (AJKD), showed that a low proportion of patients with moderate to severe AKI were seen by a kidney specialist ...
Unzipping mRNA rallies plant cells to fight infection
2023-09-20
DURHAM, N.C. -- Living things from bacteria to plants to humans must constantly adjust the chemical soup of proteins -- the workhorse molecules of life -- inside their cells to adapt to stress or changing conditions, such as when nutrients are scarce, or when a pathogen attacks.
Now, researchers have identified a previously unknown molecular mechanism that helps explain how they do it.
Studying a spindly plant called Arabidopsis thaliana, a Duke University-led team discovered short snippets of folded RNA that, under normal conditions, keep levels of defense proteins low to avoid harming the plants themselves. But when the plants detect a pathogen, these folded RNA structures ...
New research findings: Understanding the sex life of coral gives hope of clawing it back from the path to extinction
2023-09-20
For the first time, scientists have mapped the reproductive strategies and life cycle of an endangered coral species, offering hope it can be clawed back from the path to extinction.
The purple cauliflower soft coral, Dendronephthya australis, is endemic to south-eastern Australia, with the largest populations historically found in the Port Stephens estuary in New South Wales. It is one of the 100 priority species on the Federal Government’s Threatened Species Strategy.
Not only is the future ...
New model for in vitro production of human brown fat cells lays groundwork for obesity, diabetes cell therapy
2023-09-20
Brown adipocytes are specialized cells that can use energy to produce heat. This property makes them attractive tools for the treatment of diseases like obesity and type 2 diabetes. Until recently, this therapeutic potential was constrained by limited understanding of how brown adipocyte tissue (BAT) develops from precursors.
A team led by investigators at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, identified a set of cellular signaling cues that lead up to brown ...
College athletes experience worse post-injury outcomes for concussions suffered outside of sports
2023-09-20
Philadelphia, September 20, 2023 – Researchers from Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) found that college athletes had worse post-injury outcomes related to concussions they experienced outside of sports than those they experienced while playing sports. Additionally, female athletes who sustained their injury outside of sports had more severe symptoms and more days in sports lost to injury relative to male athletes. These findings suggest the need for improved concussion recognition, reporting, and monitoring outside of sports.
The study was recently published online by the Journal of Athletic Training.
Concussions have the potential to ...
CHOP researchers develop novel method using MRI to study diseases modeled in zebrafish
2023-09-20
Philadelphia, September 20, 2023 – Zebrafish have revolutionized research into a wide variety of rare and complex genetic diseases. In early development stages, their transparent bodies allow researchers to more easily study tissues and organs. However, studying organ-level defects in adult zebrafish presents a variety of challenges that prevent researchers from studying them at a microscopic level.
In a new study, researchers from Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) have developed a noninvasive method for conducting magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in adult zebrafish. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Existing drug has potential for immune paralysis
Soft brainstem implant delivers high-resolution hearing
Uncovering the structural and regulatory mechanisms underlying translation arrest
Scientists develop strategy to improve flexible tandem solar cell performance
Pushing boundaries: Detecting the anomalous Hall effect without magnetization in a new class of materials
Generative AI’s diagnostic capabilities comparable to non-specialist doctors
Some patients may experience durable disease control even after discontinuing immune checkpoint inhibitors for side effects
Native American names extend the earthquake history of northeastern North America
Lake deposits reveal directional shaking during devastating 1976 Guatemala earthquake
How wide are faults?
Key enzyme in lipid metabolism linked to immune system aging
Improved smoking cessation support needed for surgery patients across Europe
Study finds women much more likely to be aware of and have good understanding of obesity drugs
Study details role of protein that may play a key role in the development of schizophrenia
Americans don’t think bird flu is a threat, study suggests
New CDC report shows increase in autism in 2022 with notable shifts in race, ethnicity, and sex
Modulating the brain’s immune system may curb damage in Alzheimer’s
Laurie Manjikian named vice president of rehabilitation services and outpatient operations at Hebrew SeniorLife
Nonalcoholic beer yeasts evaluated for fermentation activity, flavor profiles
Millions could lose no-cost preventive services if SCOTUS upholds ruling
Research spotlight: Deer hunting season linked to rise in non-hunting firearm incidents
Rice scientists uncover quantum surprise: Matter mediates ultrastrong coupling between light particles
Integrative approach reveals promising candidates for Alzheimer’s disease risk factors or targets for therapeutic intervention
A wearable smart insole can track how you walk, run and stand
Research expands options for more sustainable soybean production
Global innovation takes center stage at Rice as undergraduate teams tackle health inequities
NIST's curved neutron beams could deliver benefits straight to industry
Finding friendship at first whiff: Scent plays role in platonic potential
Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers releases 2025 expert panel document on best practices in MS management
A cool fix for hot chips: Advanced thermal management technology for electronic devices
[Press-News.org] Doctors with long covid deserve more supportDoctors who risked their lives for others say “we’ve been left to rot” Calls for long covid to be recognized as an occupational illness