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Article

Rethinking ¡®recovery¡¯: A comparative qualitative analysis of experiences of Intensive Care with COVID and Long Covid in the United Kingdom

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Citation

MacLean A, Driessen A, Hinton L, Nettleton S, Wild C, Anderson E, Brown A, Hoddinott P, O'Dwyer C, Ziebland S & Hunt K (2025) Rethinking ¡®recovery¡¯: A comparative qualitative analysis of experiences of Intensive Care with COVID and Long Covid in the United Kingdom. Health Expectations, 28 (2), Art. No.: e70253. https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.70253

Abstract
Introduction Interpretations of ¡®recovery¡¯ from illness are complex and influenced by many factors, not least patient expectations and experiences. This paper examines meanings of ¡®recovery¡¯, and how it is strived towards, drawing on the example of COVID-19 infection. Methods Drawing on qualitative interviews (n?=?93) conducted in the UK between February 2021 and July 2022, we compare adults' accounts of being admitted to an Intensive Care Unit (ICU) with COVID-19 to accounts of being ill with Long COVID, defined as ongoing symptoms for at least 12 weeks postinfection. We conducted a multi-stage comparative analysis using Nvivo to organise and code the data. Results We identified similarities and differences in participants' descriptions of their ¡®worlds of illness¡¯. For both groups, perceptions of recovery were shaped by the novel, unknown nature of COVID-19. Participants questioned the achievability of full restoration of prior states of health, highlighted the heterogeneity of ¡®recovery trajectories¡¯ and described the hard physical and emotional work of adjusting to changed selves. Themes that revealed differences in ¡®worlds of illness¡¯ described included the different baselines, waymarkers, and pathways of illness experiences. Differences in other people's responses to their illness were also evident. For ICU participants, hospitalisation, and especially ICU admission, conferred legitimate patient status and authenticity to their symptoms. Family, friends and healthcare professionals acknowledged their illness, celebrated their survival, and granted them latitude to recover. For Long Covid participants, their patient status often lacked comparable authenticity in others' eyes. They reported encountering a lack of recognition and understanding of their ongoing need to recover.

Keywords
COVID19; illness narrative; intensive care; Long Covid; recovery

Journal
Health Expectations: Volume 28, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date30/04/2025
Publication date online30/04/2025
Date accepted by journal21/03/2025
URL
ISSN1369-6513
eISSN1369-7625

People (3)

Ms Ashley Brown

Ms Ashley Brown

Research Fellow, Institute for Social Marketing

Professor Kate Hunt

Professor Kate Hunt

Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

Dr Alice MacLean

Dr Alice MacLean

Research Fellow, Institute for Social Marketing

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