Sian Griffiths wears months with long-term covid.
She is desperate to get back to work, but feels “embarrassed” that the coronavirus has kept her in a “fog ” mental that prevents you from concentrating.
“I can’t drive far, I forget to lock the doors, I burn the food. And when I’m reading, my brain converts one word into another. I lose concentration”, says this woman from 43 years to BBC journalist Owain Clarke.
Sian, who lives in Wales, is one case of the around 1.3 million people in the UK living with long-term covid, representing more than 2% of the nation .
There is no internationally agreed definition of what long-term covid is, so specialists do not yet know how common it is or what symptoms are involved.
Symptoms may differ. Last more than four weeks and may include extreme tiredness, shortness of breath, rapid heartbeat, joint pain, or changes in taste and smell.
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Griffiths contracted covid in May 1200 when he worked as a physiotherapist in the British public health service (NHS).
He reports that before getting sick “I was fine, I had a full-time job and I was biking in the mountains and touring 64 kilometers on the road”.
“Now I have to have my mom and dad basically trying to remind me to do things all time. It’s heartbreaking””, he highlights.
Swimming in open water
A specialist told him to swim to recover. He now takes up open water swimming three times a week in North Wales, near his home.