This video focuses on the big number of long COVID (long-haul COVID) disability claims and the challenges claimants face when seeking long-term disability benefits. The attorneys explain that while insurers are now more familiar with long COVID than in the early pandemic, claims remain complex because symptoms vary widely and are often chronic. Common issues include severe fatigue, shortness of breath, worsened preexisting conditions, and cognitive problems like “brain fog,” poor concentration, and slowed thinking. Some claimants have objective findings (such as abnormal pulmonary or cardiac testing), while others primarily have subjective symptoms, which can trigger policy limitations that restrict benefits for conditions not easily proven through testing.

A key takeaway is that strong, consistent medical documentation is critical. Claimants should treat regularly—typically every 2–3 months—with a primary care doctor coordinating care and referrals to appropriate specialists such as pulmonologists, neurologists, cardiologists, endocrinologists, mental health providers, or others depending on symptoms. Because disability insurers often question why some people don’t recover like most COVID patients, records must clearly document ongoing symptoms, functional limitations, and how those impair the ability to work—physically and cognitively. The discussion emphasizes that long COVID can affect multiple body systems, and proving disability requires a well-documented, multidisciplinary medical trail.