long-hauler

English

Etymology

From long haul + -er.

Noun

long-hauler (plural long-haulers)

  1. A truck driver who covers long distances to deliver goods, often being away from home for extended periods of time.
  2. A COVID-19 patient who is suffering from the symptoms of the disease for a significantly longer period than the average.
    • 2020 June 4, Ed Yong, “COVID-19 Can Last for Several Months”, in The Atlantic:
      The disease’s “long-haulers” have endured relentless waves of debilitating symptoms—and disbelief from doctors and friends. [] Yet support groups on Slack and Facebook host thousands of people like LeClerc, who say they have been wrestling with serious COVID-19 symptoms for at least a month, if not two or three. Some call themselves “long-termers” or “long-haulers.”
    • 2021 July 27, Julie Kotsis, “‘I would just hate to see somebody go through this’; Young COVID-19 long hauler encourages others to get shot”, in Woodstock Sentinel-Review, Windsor, Ontario, page A3:
      Fourteen months later, battling chronic effects of the deadly coronavirus and saddled with permanent viral-induced asthma, she is labeled a long-hauler.
    • 2021 August 11, Nedra Rhone, “OPINION: COVID long-hauler is now vaccine advocate”, in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
      Stephanie Schroeder, 50, is a COVID-19 long-hauler who tells her story to encourage others to get the vaccine.

Coordinate terms

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