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Cold and Flu Recovery at Home Checklist

Easy 18 items · 15 min
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testuser Published 2 months ago

A practical recovery checklist for people managing a cold or flu at home. It covers hydration, rest, symptom tracking, OTC medication timing, warning signs, and a safe return to activity.

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  1. Rest and limit activity — Prioritize sleep and avoid strenuous tasks while symptoms are active.
  2. Drink fluids regularly — Sip water, broths, or warm tea; aim to stay hydrated, especially with fever.
  3. Use a humidifier or inhale steam — Run a cool-mist humidifier or breathe steam to ease congestion.
  4. Take OTC fever and pain medication as directed — Follow label dosing, note last dose time, and set alarms for repeat doses.
  5. Use saline nasal spray or short-term decongestant — Prefer saline often; use decongestants only as recommended for short periods.
  6. Gargle salt water for sore throat — Mix 1/4-1/2 tsp salt in 8 oz warm water and gargle several times daily.
  7. Track symptoms twice daily — Log morning and evening to notice trends or worsening signs.
  8. Record temperature and fever pattern — Use a digital thermometer and note time and reading each check.
  9. Check breathing and chest tightness — Note shortness of breath, increased work of breathing, or wheeze.
  10. Note urine output and fluid intake — Low urine or dark color can signal dehydration; track fluids consumed.
  11. Wash hands, dispose tissues, and sanitize surfaces — Use soap and water or hand sanitizer; clean high-touch areas daily.
  12. Isolate until 24 hours fever-free without fever-reducing meds — Stay home to reduce spread until fever subsides for a full day without meds.
  13. Avoid antibiotics unless prescribed — Do not take antibiotics for viral colds/flu unless a doctor diagnoses a bacterial infection.
  14. Seek urgent care if warning signs appear — Get immediate medical attention for severe or rapidly worsening symptoms.
  15. Watch for difficulty breathing or severe shortness of breath
  16. Watch for new chest pain, confusion, or persistent vomiting
  17. Contact your doctor if symptoms worsen or last more than 7 days — Call for advice or an appointment if no improvement, high fevers, or new symptoms develop.
  18. Return to activities gradually after recovery — Start with light activity once symptoms improve and no fever for 24–48 hours.
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