‘Girls’ creator/star still suffering from COVID-19 ordeal
Lena Dunham says her body “revolted” in a debilitating monthslong struggle with COVID-19.
The 34-year-old creator and star of “Girls” gave a detailed account Friday on Instagram of what she said she experienced after testing positive for the coronavirus in mid-march, just as much of the nation was shutting down because of the pandemic.
‘Body simply revolted’
“It started with achy joints,” Dunham writes, “then the pain was joined by a crushing fatigue. Then a fever of 102. Suddenly my body simply revolted.”
She went into isolation and felt severe symptoms for three weeks, she said.
Dunham was treated by a doctor in her home, and she did not have to be hospitalized.
But she knows she is lucky to have exceptional health care and flexible work. She tested negative after a month and was able to see people in her inner circle again, but said she is having lingering problems.
Dunham, a native New Yorker, did not say where she was when she contracted the virus and went into isolation.
She was the lead writer and star of the HBO series “Girls” from 2012 to 2017 and is working on a film adaptation of the young adult novel, “Catherine, Called Birdy.”
Dunham said she was reluctant to tell her story but felt compelled to after seeing the carelessness with which so many are treating social distancing and mask wearing.
‘Protect yourself’
“When you take the appropriate measures to protect yourself and your neighbors,” she writes, “you save them a world of pain.”
For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough, that clear up in two to three weeks.
For some — especially older adults and people with existing health problems — it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia, and death.