Essex Covid: Essex mum says her life feels like it s over after suffering from long Covid essexlive.news - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from essexlive.news Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
E-Mail
A new study by Cardiff University in collaboration with the University of Hertfordshire has revealed the huge secondary burden placed on those closest to people living with Long Covid.
The researchers surveyed more than 700 Covid-19 survivors along with their partners and close relatives to understand for the first time the impact of the disease on families as a whole.
The findings, published today in
BMJ Open, suggest family quality of life is being severely affected and a major system of support is needed for both survivors - and those closest to them.
Survivors and their families spoke of the huge impact on their lives and backed calls for more support.
An Essex mum diagnosed with long Covid says the illness has had a “tragic effect” on her family’s life. Billie-Jo Redman, 27, suffers from fatigue, brain fog and daily waves of pins and needles due to the disease. She has also been forced to wear a heart monitor 24-hours a day because she frequently has a high heart rate. “My life feels like it’s over,” she said. “The hospital just doesn’t know what to do with me. “They can see my heart rate is way too high, but they don’t know why.
Billie-Jo with her son, Roman
COVID-19 Scan for May 26, 2021 umn.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from umn.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
More must be done to support families of those who have been affected by long Covid, researchers have said.
Experts have said that families of those who are still ill for weeks, or months, after infection can be “severely affected”.
A new study, published in the journal BMJ Open, examined the experiences of those who have struggled with symptoms after infection.
Researchers also quizzed family members.
They found that people’s quality of life was being impacted by the ongoing effects.
Academics from Cardiff performed an online survey of 735 people with long Covid, with an average age of 48, half of whom were from Europe.