The Sentinel-Record

COVID-19 survivor’s guilt a growing issue

- David Chesire and Mark S. McIntosh AP’s The Conversati­on David Chesire is an associate professor of the College of Medicine, University of Florida. Mark S. McIntosh is an associate professor of Emergency Medicine, University of Florida. The Conversati­on

People are eager to return to normal after a year of coronaviru­s, but is the U.S. there yet? Hardly. The ongoing psychologi­cal and spiritual damage caused by the pandemic is rising, too.

Guilt and shame are two prevailing emotions surroundin­g COVID-19. This guilt stems in part from the fact that anyone could be a potential carrier of the virus

— so anyone, then, could unwittingl­y pass it to another person. Guilt can also arise when a person looks at the national and global death tolls and wonders how they were spared.

Guilt also happens when family members can’t visit loved ones undergoing treatment at a hospital, or when someone with COVID-19 survives but reads about an infected stranger who died. A particular type of response called survivor’s guilt can occur when people lose loved ones due to a traumatic event, or when they themselves experience­d the threat but survived it.

As a psychologi­st and a doctor of emergency medicine, we have personal experience with patients suffering from survivor’s guilt as they watched loved ones succumb to COVID-19. And as the pandemic continues, we expect to see more.

Survivor’s guilt can occur whether or not a person caused an event to occur. It can happen to a sole survivor of a plane crash who had nothing to do with the accident, or an intoxicate­d driver who crashed his car and killed his passenger. Either way, the person feels they were spared an event while others perished, and feelings of grief and anxiety result. Survivor’s guilt can affect up to 90% of survivors of traumatic events. COVID-19 survivors in Bergamo, Italy, one of the world’s hardest-hit towns, have experience­d this on a widespread basis. Some people have reported a type of survivor guilt when they have been vaccinated, with many wondering why they have been so fortunate.

Conflictin­g messages from the federal and various state and local government­s haven’t helped. Because some leaders have suggested that COVID-19 is no worse than the flu, millions of Americans did not wear masks. By some estimates, not wearing masks could have contribute­d to 130,000 deaths.

Also, a person can spread COVID-19 without knowing they have the disease. This uncertaint­y combined with loneliness might have led to social gatherings that weren’t the safest. Perhaps an elderly parent decides to risk illness rather than spend the holiday alone. Many parents, including our own, say they want to make the most out of the time they have right now; they cannot bank on being around next year.

In the world of palliative medicine, there is no shortage of examples of patients choosing quality of life over quantity, sometimes refusing lifesaving but invasive treatment so they can spend time engaged in activities they might not otherwise be able to enjoy. This is not unusual at any age — it’s not at all uncommon for people to make choices that have potential tremendous costs, from smoking to sky diving.

So is someone who inadverten­tly passed along COVID-19 at fault? For example, how do we cope with the guilt when we know we passed the virus on to a family member? Generally people don’t ascribe this kind of blame when they inadverten­tly pass the flu to someone who gets sick, or perhaps even dies. We do not see countless news stories assigning blame when someone with the common cold does not wear a mask at the grocery store. We believe that people should be forgiving of themselves should they accidental­ly transmit COVID-19. Self-forgivenes­s requires recognitio­n we cannot control everything and that our motives were benign.

Symptoms of survivor’s guilt include anxiety, depression, headache, nausea, sleeplessn­ess and fatigue. It can lead to post-traumatic stress disorder. Managing survivor’s guilt is an individual process, and what works for one may not work for another. Interventi­ons include deep breathing, meditation, relaxation, exercising, a healthy diet, journaling, adopting a hobby, getting a pet, watching comedies and reaching out — volunteeri­ng or engaging with family, friends and co-workers. For some, spirituali­ty and faith are also important.

Nonreligio­us people may find comfort by connecting directly to nature, where life and death are part of a grand cycle, and nature itself may have a purpose that ordains when one person succumbs while another survives.

As people pass through the grieving process, healing comes by recognizin­g our interconne­ctedness to each other. But when the U.S. quarantine­d, many people lost that most basic and primal coping mechanism. Instead, Americans, sometimes alone, have had to explore existentia­l truths that may have been painful, even devastatin­g. Yet in many ways, the country has already prevailed. Through mourning our losses and suffering heartbreak, our medical, psychologi­cal and spiritual well-being remains a strength.

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