2021
DOI: 10.1136/bmj.n1859
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Long covid: reshaping conversations about medically unexplained symptoms

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Patients whose symptoms cannot be, or are not routinely, clinically measured (such as cognitive symptoms; Kaduszkiewicz et al, 2010 ) are at greater risk of “testimonial injustice”—that is, having their illness dismissed by medical professionals ( De Jesus et al, 2021 ). The novel and heterogenous nature of Long COVID also provides a particular challenge for clinicians dealing with complex and undifferentiated presentations and “medically unexplained symptoms” ( Davidson and Menkes, 2021 ). The data presented here demonstrate that cognitive difficulties reported by patients can be predicted by severity and pattern of symptoms during the initial stages of infection, and during the ongoing illness.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Patients whose symptoms cannot be, or are not routinely, clinically measured (such as cognitive symptoms; Kaduszkiewicz et al, 2010 ) are at greater risk of “testimonial injustice”—that is, having their illness dismissed by medical professionals ( De Jesus et al, 2021 ). The novel and heterogenous nature of Long COVID also provides a particular challenge for clinicians dealing with complex and undifferentiated presentations and “medically unexplained symptoms” ( Davidson and Menkes, 2021 ). The data presented here demonstrate that cognitive difficulties reported by patients can be predicted by severity and pattern of symptoms during the initial stages of infection, and during the ongoing illness.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%