Long COVID Might be Taking Toll on Health Care Workforce
Long COVID appears to be worsening the labor shortage in the United States, and the health care industry—which has lost 20% of workers over the pandemic—could be particularly hard hit.
Long COVID might be exacerbating the labor shortage in the United States as a whole and in health care in particular, according to recent data about both problems. This doesn’t surprise Linda Spaulding, RN-BC, CIC, CHEC, CHOP, an infection prevention consultant and a member of Infection Control Today®’s (ICT®’s) Editorial Advisory Board (EAB). Spaulding contends that hospitals want heath care professionals complaining of long COVID symptoms to return to work nonetheless. “They’re not always listened to or told ‘it’s all in your head’,” says Spaulding. “We are going to see more and more of this because no one knows how to treat or care for people with long COVID because it’s a condition that we haven’t dealt with in the past. Some medical professionals and hospital management just don’t want to hear the compliant. They just want you to return to work to care for the patients. No one is caring for the health care workers.”
Katie Bach, MBA, a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution,
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Recent
The health care system lost 20% of its workforce over the course of the pandemic, according to the US
Nurses in intensive care units and non-clinical workers are especially vulnerable to getting COVID-19, according to a recent
Rebecca Leach, RN, BSN, MPH, CIC, another ICT® EAB member, predicts that the health care system will feel the effects of long COVID for many years to come. Many nurses are baby boomers and this may be what pushes them into retirement, which will force hospitals to make systemic changes. Leach says hospitals will “look at alternative care methodologies; things like team nursing and allowing non-nursing clinical staff to practice at expanded roles. Cross-training like we do for free-standing EDs, for example, where you have limited staff, and everyone has to help out with other tasks.”
One good thing that Leach hopes comes out of this is more oversight of traveling nurse pay, saying that there should be “regulation on how much those companies price gouge during these types of emergencies.”
Monica Verduzco-Gutierrez, MD, director of the COVID Recovery Clinic at University Health in Texas,
Spaulding warns that “we haven’t seen the worst of staffing shortage yet. I predict that as soon as this current spike tapers off more health care workers will leave their job for other careers and the next spike in cases will be unbearable because of the lack of health care workers. Health care workers deserve better care and respect. Not being pushed back to work too soon just so the unvaccinated have someone to care for them. This is a shortage that will last for a very long time.”
Long COVID might overlap with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). In a recent
“We found PEM [Post-Exertional Malaise] to be highly represented in this cohort (89.1% at any time during the course of illness, 72.2% at month 7),” the study states. “Intriguingly, among those still experiencing symptoms at month 6 with no PEM (n = 707, 28.8%), fatigue was still the most common symptom.”
Spaulding points to the practical implications of dealing with long COVID and/or ME/CFS. “Many health care workers are single moms who have to leave the workforce to care for their children who get COVID or are sent home from school because of an exposure. Where is their assistance? Who is standing up to help them? The unvaccinated sure aren’t.”
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