Quebec health system unprepared to handle Omicron-fuelled long COVID cases
Montrealer Claudia Hébert says she started to feel extreme fatigue and to get fevers three weeks after returning from Senegal in March 2020, with only a few months left to a complete her Université de Montréal veterinary medicine program.
Some symptoms eventually subsided, but her daily brain fog and painful migraines continued, leaving her no choice but to drop her classes.
“It was my dream as a little girl to become a veterinarian and I was about to realize it,” Hébert, 30, said in a recent interview. “Now, if someone asks me what I ate yesterday, I don’t remember anymore …. I have become disabled.”
Hébert was diagnosed in August 2021 as having long COVID, which refers to COVID-19 symptoms that persist well beyond two weeks — the time by which most people have recovered from the disease. With concerns being raised about the Omicron variant fuelling a spike in long COVID cases, health experts say Quebec does not have the resources to help people like Hébert or the many others who have survived the disease but remain seriously injured.