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credit card debt, ruined retirement plans


Teresa Harding

Source: Teresa Harding

It took three months for Teresa Harding to open her termination letter.

“I couldn’t look at it,” Harding, 47, said. For seven years, she’d worked at a pain management center in Lexington, Kentucky. “I enjoyed my co-workers and our patients.

“It was a fun, exciting job,” she added.

But after a serious bout with Covid in July 2021 that landed her in the hospital, Harding never got better. Unable to work, she was laid off in January.

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“I just sit at home, watching movies that I’ve seen before but don’t remember,” Harding said. “I’ve lost my purpose.”

She and her husband, Roy, also need to pay around an extra $300 a month for treatments for her lingering symptoms of memory loss, severe fatigue and migraines.

“We’re barely making ends meet,” Harding said.

The side effects aren’t just physical

“It also directly threatens patients’ ability to work consistently,” Donovan added.

Long Covid threatens financial stability

‘A pretty dramatic effect’ on retirement planning

Sharon Sunders

Courtesy: Sharon Sunders

Nearly three years after Sharon Sunders got Covid, she’s still coughing.

In the spring of 2020, when months had passed since she’d first contracted the virus, Sunders tried to return to her job as a project manager at a marketing agency in Minneapolis.

Almost immediately, she realized she wasn’t up for it.

“There’s no way I could keep working,” said Sunders, 59. “My memory stinks.

“I’m short on breath when I talk or move around,” she added. “There’s severe exhaustion, too.”

Long Covid is as much part of the pandemic as is the acute phase, during which the government went to great lengths to treat people and save lives.

Oved Amitay

president of the Long Covid Alliance

Fortunately, Sunders had disability insurance through her job and has been able to live off those payments. However, they cover just about half of her prior earnings.

“It’s enough to meet our basic needs, but not anything else,” she said.

Sunders had planned to work for at least five more years to build up her nest egg. Those plans are now foiled, and she and her husband, Joel, are considering beginning to withdraw from their retirement savings years before they’d hoped.

“It’s had a pretty dramatic effect on my retirement planning,” she said. “It’s scary.”

Patients ‘may not have the resources’ to apply for aid

It’s had a pretty dramatic effect on my retirement planning. It’s scary.

Sharon Sunders

long Covid patient

“They may not have the resources to go through the process,” Verduzco-Gutierrez said. “They’re having to hire attorneys. Some of them are just giving up.”

Sunders is adamant that she qualifies for the benefit, and refuses to give up. She’s currently involved in her third appeal of the government’s decision to reject her.

But the fight has worn her down even more.

“I usually have about a good hour a day,” she said. “It’s hard for me to respond to all these requests for medical records.”

To date, the Social Security Administration has flagged about 44,000 disability claims nationally that include Covid as one of the medical conditions, according to agency spokeswoman Nicole Tiggemann, making up just 1% of all disability applications the agency has received.

To be approved, “a person must have a medical condition or combination of conditions that prevents the individual from working and is expected to last at least one year or result in death,” Tiggemann said.

‘There’s a tidal wave of us coming’

Sunders wishes the Biden administration would do more to help those financially struggling with long Covid.

“Our government is abandoning us,” she said. “But I’m just the beginning; there’s a tidal wave of us coming.”

Harding feels the same.

“I read in my support groups daily how people are losing their jobs because they’re no longer physically able to perform them, but you can’t live on nothing,” Harding said. “If the government doesn’t acknowledge what’s going on, you’re going to have tons of people without homes, going hungry.”

The White House did not respond to requests for comment.

Why long Covid could cost the U.S. nearly $4 trillion

When her paychecks stopped coming in, Harding had to cash out her 401(k) retirement savings. She had about $15,000 in the account.

In the following months, she and her husband have also racked up more than $8,000 in debt on their credit card.

“We put food, gas, medication and hospital bills on it to make sure we’re able to pay for our car and home,” she said.

Harding applied for SSDI in August, but hasn’t heard back yet. The wait is stressful. And a person in the Social Security office had been discouraging.

“They said that it’s usually a two- to four-year battle to get it,” she said.

— Jessica Dickler contributed reporting.

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