Understanding Experiences of Youth with Long COVID: A Qualitative Approach
Abstract
:1. Understanding Experiences of Youth with Long COVID: A Qualitative Approach
2. Method
2.1. Participants
2.2. Procedure
2.3. Measures
2.4. Analytic Plan
3. Results
3.1. Severity of Illness/Symptomatology (n = 263)
“Um, brain fog. Trouble concentrating, trouble thinking, trouble remembering, um… red eyes, kind of like from the start it’s just been on repeat and it just keeps coming back”.
“Well, I did have these like ‘flares’ is what we’ve been calling them, um, since November, where I will get like a low-grade fever sometimes and like my face gets really red. It really, like my skin feels really hot like I can feel myself kind of radiating heat, but physically I feel really cold, if that makes sense?”
“So she’s had a long, complicated case. So she’s spent three months in the hospital. Her manifestation has been these strange skin lesions. So when these skin flares start she has, her skin starts off red and swollen and then it condenses inward and then the skin opens up and it looks like a burn or blister… so it would look almost like a burn with a curling iron… but she didn’t touch it. And, um, they’re very painful”.
3.2. Difficulty Surrounding the Diagnostic Process/Not Being Believed (n = 146)
3.3. Impact on Family/Social Connections (n = 67)
“It’s very scary I mean she was hospitalized for over 3 months and transferred to [hospital name] to try to get a second opinion, so, our family was, you know, split apart for a while”. The child detailed changes in her social patterns, explaining “now I’m only allowed to see my friends at a distance, with a mask on. So that’s made a big, big impact”.
“The collective experience of going through a pandemic together… it’s just different. It’s… we’ve changed our school pattern, our work pattern, like, who we’re seeing, who we’re not seeing and it does impact you”. This caregiver also discussed how this has impacted her child specifically, noting “when we go out he’s more nervous to play on the playground with other kids there, or, you know to be that young and worried about COVID-19”.
3.4. Poor School Functioning (n = 60)
“My teachers have always been really good when I was too sick to do anything for a while there. In February I reached out to my teachers and had meetings with them and tried to just start, you know, full force and um, making up with all of my classes and that definitely was super overwhelming, um, yeah not to be able to think as fast or do things as fast as I used to. So, yeah I definitely have a lot of school to make up and it’s been hard with all the different things I have to do if I’m going to graduate on time”.
3.5. Positive Coping (n = 55)
“I’m glad that there’s people doing research for kids, because I think it’s just so important for doctors to know or, you know, we’re coming up with plans for people to move forward in the future”.
3.6. Subsequent Positive Medical Experiences (n = 46)
“The second time I was admitted at children’s, so I was admitted two times and the doctors completely, like, changed. They tried so many more things, they tried experimental things on me. Like you could tell, this Long COVID research they were mentioning it, they treated me. It was night and day, between the way they treated me”. She went on to talk about the way doctors validated her experiences, stating “The things… the things that they said to me, they were saying, like, ‘I’m not gonna give up until we figure this out or it stops’ and, you know, like telling me how proud they are of me and like all this stuff. It was… like I never had a doctor say anything like that”.
3.7. Mental Health (n = 40)
3.8. Knowledge of Medical Field/Healthcare Experience (n = 31)
“I’m a nursing home administrator by occupation, so I’ve been living, breathing, nothing but COVID, so I know a lot about COVID. I have been completely like persistent and like just continuing to advocate for him”.
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Theme | n | |
---|---|---|
Severity of illness & Symptomatology | Descriptions of the debilitating nature of symptoms, several of which are outside of those commonly understood | 263 |
Difficulty surrounding the diagnostic process & not being believed | Descriptions of feeling as though they were not believed by medical professionals, or that their illness experiences were psychiatric in nature despite evidence of infection | 146 |
Impact on family & social connections | Comments related to being isolated from their friends/family, unable to enjoy activities of life as they were prior to illness onset | 67 |
Poor school functioning | Descriptions of difficulty completing schoolwork, having to delay course completion, and associated stress as a result of these circumstances | 60 |
Positive coping | Any mention of helpful or positive occurrences during COVID-19 illness | 55 |
Subsequent positive medical experiences | Descriptions of experiences in which the child/family had better interactions with the medical system | 46 |
Mental Health | Mentions of impact of COVID-19 on mental health symptomatology | 40 |
Knowledge of medical field & healthcare experience | Mentions that a family member, often a caregiver, was a healthcare professional or had increased knowledge of the medical field, which directly impacted advocacy efforts and increased understanding of what was happening | 31 |
Kappa | 0.9002 |
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Torres, C.; Maeda, K.; Johnson, M.; Jason, L.A. Understanding Experiences of Youth with Long COVID: A Qualitative Approach. Children 2024, 11, 335. https://doi.org/10.3390/children11030335
Torres C, Maeda K, Johnson M, Jason LA. Understanding Experiences of Youth with Long COVID: A Qualitative Approach. Children. 2024; 11(3):335. https://doi.org/10.3390/children11030335
Chicago/Turabian StyleTorres, Chelsea, Kensei Maeda, Madeline Johnson, and Leonard A. Jason. 2024. "Understanding Experiences of Youth with Long COVID: A Qualitative Approach" Children 11, no. 3: 335. https://doi.org/10.3390/children11030335
APA StyleTorres, C., Maeda, K., Johnson, M., & Jason, L. A. (2024). Understanding Experiences of Youth with Long COVID: A Qualitative Approach. Children, 11(3), 335. https://doi.org/10.3390/children11030335