Long Covid: 'I have to choose between walking and talking'
By Charlie Jones
BBC News
Published 7 hours ago
IMAGE SOURCE,JASMINE HAYER
Image caption,
Jasmine Hayer has been contacted by hundreds of patients after starting a blog to raise awareness of long Covid
More than a million people in the UK are suffering from long Covid, with fears the number could rise due to the Omicron variant. Many patients say they only had a mild initial infection but it went on to ruin their health, social lives and finances.
Jasmine Hayer, 32, was living in London and training to be a yoga teacher when she caught coronavirus last March.
It sometimes feels like it was a different person, she says, speaking slowly and carefully from her parent's house in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire.
She moved back there last summer when she realised she couldn't even make her bed without becoming breathless.
"This illness is so baffling and no-one really knows how to treat it. I honestly don't know if I will ever get back to full health but I'll never stop trying," she says.
IMAGE SOURCE,JASMINE HAYER
Image caption,
Jasmine was training to be a yoga teacher before she got the virus
Currently on sick pay and previously furloughed, she is desperate to work again.
"My whole life has been pulled out from underneath me like so many others with long Covid. We've had a big identity crisis," she says.
"I need to reinvent myself. I can't even lift my left arm up, let alone be a yoga teacher, which is heartbreaking."
For nine months, doctors said anxiety was the cause of her symptoms, which included a tight chest, heart pain, breathlessness, fatigue and palpitations.
She knew they were wrong and developed her own symptom tracker which helped her work out that her triggers were bending over, walking and talking, with a delayed impact in her lungs.
Her health only began to improve when she started treatment at a clinic for 130 patients with severe long Covid, at the Royal Brompton Hospital, in London.
IMAGE SOURCE,JASMINE HAYER
Image caption,
Jasmine felt desperately alone as doctors dismissed her symptoms as anxiety
Doctors found multiple health issues. A gas transfer test showed oxygen levels in her lungs to be 53%, the same as a lung disease patient, and she was diagnosed with post-Covid heart inflammation, which they told her they had not seen before.
They also found small blood clots on her lungs, which only showed up on a specialised scan called a ventilation-perfusion scan.
Since starting blood-thinning medication, the clots have gone but she still has abnormal blood and oxygen flow to her lungs.
By Charlie Jones
BBC News
Published 7 hours ago

Image caption,
Jasmine Hayer has been contacted by hundreds of patients after starting a blog to raise awareness of long Covid
More than a million people in the UK are suffering from long Covid, with fears the number could rise due to the Omicron variant. Many patients say they only had a mild initial infection but it went on to ruin their health, social lives and finances.
Jasmine Hayer, 32, was living in London and training to be a yoga teacher when she caught coronavirus last March.
It sometimes feels like it was a different person, she says, speaking slowly and carefully from her parent's house in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire.
She moved back there last summer when she realised she couldn't even make her bed without becoming breathless.
"This illness is so baffling and no-one really knows how to treat it. I honestly don't know if I will ever get back to full health but I'll never stop trying," she says.

Image caption,
Jasmine was training to be a yoga teacher before she got the virus
Currently on sick pay and previously furloughed, she is desperate to work again.
"My whole life has been pulled out from underneath me like so many others with long Covid. We've had a big identity crisis," she says.
"I need to reinvent myself. I can't even lift my left arm up, let alone be a yoga teacher, which is heartbreaking."
For nine months, doctors said anxiety was the cause of her symptoms, which included a tight chest, heart pain, breathlessness, fatigue and palpitations.
She knew they were wrong and developed her own symptom tracker which helped her work out that her triggers were bending over, walking and talking, with a delayed impact in her lungs.
Her health only began to improve when she started treatment at a clinic for 130 patients with severe long Covid, at the Royal Brompton Hospital, in London.

Image caption,
Jasmine felt desperately alone as doctors dismissed her symptoms as anxiety
Doctors found multiple health issues. A gas transfer test showed oxygen levels in her lungs to be 53%, the same as a lung disease patient, and she was diagnosed with post-Covid heart inflammation, which they told her they had not seen before.
They also found small blood clots on her lungs, which only showed up on a specialised scan called a ventilation-perfusion scan.
Since starting blood-thinning medication, the clots have gone but she still has abnormal blood and oxygen flow to her lungs.