“It’s also challenging because most of the disability benefit forms are ‘generic’ and do not ask specific questions about COVID disability,” Dr. Whiteson added. “It can be like trying to drive a square peg into a round hole.”
Still, when it comes to long COVID, completing disability paperwork is increasingly becoming part of standard care, along with managing medication, rehabilitation therapies, and lifestyle changes to navigate daily life with this illness, Dr. Whiteson noted.
Monica Verduzco-Gutierrez, MD, chair of rehabilitation medicine and director of the Post-COVID-19 Recovery Clinic at the University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, agreed with this assessment.
“I have done letter upon letter of appeal to disability insurance companies,” she said.
Some doctors, however, are reluctant to step up in such cases, in part because no standard diagnostic guidelines exist for long COVID and because it can be frustrating.
“This is the work that is not paid and causes burnout in physicians,” Dr. Verduzco-Gutierrez said. “The paperwork, the fighting with insurance companies, the resubmission of forms for disability all to get what your patient needs – and then it gets denied.
“We will keep doing this because our patients need this disability income in order to live their lives and to afford what they need for recovery,” said Dr. Verduzco-Gutierrez. “But at some point something has to change because this isn’t sustainable.”
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.