COVID-19 Race, equity and social justice in Neuroscience School of Medicine

Long-COVID clinic expanding reach to vulnerable metro, rural communities

Tanya Dotson (left) and Amy DeFranco, DPT, a Washington University physical therapist who provided Dotson with care early in her recovery from long COVID, embrace during a meeting on the Medical Campus in November that included community partners, patients, physicians and other care providers. The group met to kick off a collaboration led by Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and aimed at advancing long-COVID care in medically vulnerable and underserved communities in the St. Louis metropolitan region and rural Missouri. (Photo: Matt Miller/School of Medicine)

In 2020, overwhelmed hospitals and excessive fatalities defined a world grappling with the COVID-19 pandemic. Simultaneously, a new challenge emerged: A growing population struggled to recover fully from COVID-19.

Patients coined the term “long COVID” to describe their prolonged health challenges that can linger months after initial coronavirus infection. Eventually, long-COVID clinics, programs focused on treating patients with long COVID, opened around the country, including at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.

Now, physicians and researchers at the School of Medicine are working with community partners to identify needs and better deliver services to medically vulnerable and underserved communities in the St. Louis metropolitan region and rural Missouri. The Washington University health-care team was awarded a five-year grant totaling $4.5 million from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, through the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Eight other teams around the country also were awarded the grant.

“Under-resourced communities in St. Louis and rural Missouri have been disproportionately affected by COVID-19 and have not always been able to access the care they need and deserve for long COVID,” said Abby L. Cheng, MD, a Washington University physical medicine and rehabilitation physician and lead principal investigator on the grant. “A communitywide partnership, involving patients, trusted community organizations, primary care teams, medical subspecialists and experts from other health-care disciplines, aims to increase available resources for these underserved populations.

“This grant will allow us to create solutions together.”

Community partners include: the St. Louis Integrated Health Network, St. Louis Regional Health Commission and four St. Louis Federal Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs). The latter are outpatient clinics that qualify for reimbursement under Medicare and Medicaid and offer comprehensive, high-quality primary care and preventive services regardless of patients’ ability to pay.

Washington University’s long-COVID clinic opened in October 2020. Given the overwhelming need and multifaceted nature of the illness, a multidisciplinary group of clinicians across the School of Medicine care for long-COVID patients. The clinic, overseen by the school’s Division of Infectious Diseases, evaluates and refers patients to various services, including the Living Well Center, a lifestyle-medicine-based center within the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery.

This initiative aims to increase and improve long-COVID care in St. Louis and in Missouri rural communities. It will support primary care physicians in the region as they diagnose and manage long-COVID-related symptoms in their patients, in part by improving communication and the referral process between primary care teams and specialists at Washington University. The expectation is that such collaborations will reduce wait times and boost access to care.

“Our community partners have taught us that equipping primary care teams — teams that already take care of underserved patients on a daily basis — with practical clinical tools and long-COVID-treatment option updates is a more effective, equitable strategy than solely increasing patient access to our single clinic,” explained Cheng, an assistant professor in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery. She added that many patients prefer to receive care within their trusted “medical home,” such as at an FQHC, rather than to navigate the university’s system if it is unfamiliar to them.

The narratives long-COVID patients often share have a common theme: the persistent struggle to obtain care — like that of a north St. Louis resident who, unable to work remotely, contracted COVID-19 early in the pandemic, Cheng recalled. The patient developed long COVID, which included breathing issues, brain fog and fatigue. The illness led to the loss of her job and, consequently, the loss of her health insurance.

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