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2: Long Covid

How did long Covid come to be diagnosed by patients rather than scientists? The next in a thought-provoking new book exploding conventional wisdom on medical diagnoses.

The thought-provoking new book from the neurologist and award-winning author Suzanne O'Sullivan, asking whether our culture of medical diagnosis can harm, rather than help us.

The boundaries between sickness and health are being redrawn. Mental health categories are shifting and expanding, radically altering what we consider to be 'normal'. Genetic tests can now detect pathologies decades before people experience symptoms, and sometimes before they're even born. And increased health screening draws more and more people into believing they are unwell.

An accurate diagnosis can bring greater understanding and of course improved treatment. But many diagnoses aren't as definitive as we think. And in some cases they risk turning healthy people into patients. Drawing on the stories of real people, as well as decades of clinical practice and the latest medical research, Dr Suzanne O'Sullivan overturns long held assumptions and reframes how we think about illness and health.

Today: What are the roots of long Covid? And how did the condition come to be diagnosed by patients via social media rather than by scientists?

Reader: Brid Brennan
Writer: Dr Suzanne O'Sullivan has been a consultant in neurology since 2004, specialising in the investigation of complex epilepsy, as well as an award-winning author. Her first book It's All in Your Head, won both the Wellcome Book Prize and the Royal Society of Biology Book Prize.
Abridger: Katrin Williams
Producer: Justine Willett

Release date:

14 minutes

On radio

Tue 18 Mar 2025 11:45

Broadcasts

  • Tue 18 Mar 2025 11:45
  • Wed 19 Mar 2025 00:30