AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the experiences and attitudes of general practitioners (GPs) in Austria regarding Long-COVID, highlighting how their understanding has evolved since the pandemic began.
  • Thirty semi-structured interviews were conducted to gather qualitative data, revealing that while GPs have significant experience with Long-COVID, certain complex symptoms may not have been fully recognized or classified.
  • The findings suggest that managing Long-COVID is challenging for GPs and patients alike, especially when treatments aren't effective, signaling that Long-COVID will remain a pressing issue in healthcare systems due to ongoing COVID-19 variants.

Article Abstract

Background: Long-COVID is a new multisectoral healthcare challenge. This study aims at understanding experiences, knowledge, attitudes and (information) needs that GPs had and have in relation to Long-COVID and how these evolved since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Methods: The study used an exploratory qualitative research design using semistructured interviews. A total of 30 semistructured interviews with GPs in different primary care settings (single practices, group practices, primary care centres) were conducted between February and July 2022. The data were analysed using qualitative thematic content analysis with the software Atlas.ti.

Results: This is the first study that empirically investigated Long-COVID management by GPs in Austria during the third year of the pandemic. All GPs indicated having experience with Long-COVID. In cities, GPs tended to have slightly better networks with specialists. The GPs who already worked in teams tended to find the management of Long-COVID easier. The symptoms that the physicians described as Long-COVID symptoms corresponded to those described in the international literature, but it is unclear whether syndromes and symptomes such as Post-Exertional-Malaise, autonomic dysfunction such as postural tachycardia syndrome or Mast-Cell-Overactivation-Syndrom, and cognitive dysfunctions were also recognized and correctly classified since they were never mentioned. Most GPs reacted quickly by granting the needed sick leaves and by seeing and discussing with the patients often.The treatment of the patients is described as an enormous challenge and frustrating for patient and GP if the treatment does not yield to significantly improved health also due to the high costs for the patient.

Conclusion: Long-COVID will continue to preoccupy our health care systems for a long time to come, as new variants of COVID-19 will continue to produce new patients without adequate prevention strategies. Therefore, it is not a question of if but when good support for GPs and adequate care pathways for people with Long-COVID will be implemented. Specific contact points that are familiar with therapy-refractory postacute infection syndromes like the postacute COVID condition as a subgroup of Long-COVID are urgently needed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11542353PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-024-20475-zDOI Listing

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