Episode Details
Back to EpisodesCLASSIC - Dancing Plague, to Gulf War Syndrome, To Long COVID
Description
A woman dances through the streets of 1518 Strasbourg until she collapses. Decades later, veterans return from the Gulf War with symptoms no one can neatly explain. Today, long COVID lingers, a modern mystery that feels unsettlingly familiar. We connect these threads to ask a bigger question: how do we care for people when causes hide in the fog?
We dig into the dancing plague’s competing theories—from ergot-tainted grain to mass stress shaped by famine, fear, and faith—and how ritual cures like red shoes and shrine pilgrimages reflected the beliefs of the time. Then we map the terrain of Gulf War Syndrome: toxic exposures, PTSD, and the VA’s push toward system-wide, symptom-first management when evidence stayed messy. Finally, we unpack long COVID’s durable symptoms—fatigue, brain fog, breathlessness, altered smell and taste—alongside evolving science on vaccines, potential mechanisms, and the data fragmentation that slows clean answers.
Through it all, one principle guides us: believe patients and treat what you can see, even while research races to confirm the why. We share practical takeaways on pacing, cognitive strategies, supportive rehab, and communication that validates lived experience without overpromising cures. History doesn’t just repeat; it rhymes. By blending curiosity with compassion, we can make care better now and push science forward. If this conversation resonates, share it with a friend, subscribe for more thoughtful dives, and tell us where you want us to go next. Your insights help shape future episodes—what should we explore?