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16 Ways to Stop a Cold

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16 Ways to Stop a Cold

Sometimes it seems like winter is just one long case of the sneezes; we all know what it’s like to go around for weeks with a cold we just can’t shake. Yet some lucky folks seem to get through the cold and flu season with nary a sniffle. How do they do it?

As it turns out, it’s not really luck. Although it’s true that some immune systems are more robust than others, just about anyone attacked by a cold virus is going to get a cold. The secret: Prevent the cold virus from breaching your defenses. And at the first sign of exposure or symptoms, mount a full-bore offense to stop it in its tracks.

Know the Different Symptoms of a Cold, Flu, Swing Flu, or Pneumonia

How to stop a cold before it starts
The germs that cause colds have a preferred route of travel. Unlike various strains of influenza virus, which tend to travel in airborne droplets, cold viruses prefer a physical transmission route: from your hands to your nose or eyes, and then to the nasopharynx — where the nose meets the mouth at the back of the throat (and where most colds begin). Studies have shown that most cold viruses can survive for up to three hours on nonporous surfaces such as doorknobs, countertops, and coffee cups. They can also survive on people’s hands for several hours if they don’t wash them.

That’s why hand washing — after you shake hands, after you open a door, after you push a shopping cart — is item number one in your anticold defense manual. If you kill cold germs on your hands before you transfer them to your nose or eyes, you stop a cold before it can start.

Few of us can wash our hands as often as needed, though, so be sure to follow these other strategies as well:

1. Avoid touching your face, especially your eyes and nose. There are hundreds of viruses that cause the common cold, and most of them are rhinoviruses, which need to get into the mucous membranes lining the nose or into the tear ducts in order to cause infection. That means touching your face — specifically your nose and eyes — is the primary way people give themselves cold germs. The nasopharynx, where the nose meets the mouth, is the “sweet spot” for cold viruses. If they can reach this spot, it’s very likely you’ll get sick; if you prevent them from getting there, you won’t. And a virus deposited at the base of the nose can easily be inhaled higher up into the nose.

So your mother was right: Don’t pick or touch your nose. The tear ducts provide another pathway; rub your eyes and the cold virus can easily drain through the tear ducts into the nasopharynx. Don’t rub them, and you avoid another possible cold.

2. Try not to touch public surfaces. Studies show that teaching children to sneeze into their elbow, rather than cover their mouths with their hands, has been very effective at reducing the incidence of colds in schools. Why? Because then the virus isn’t on their hands, where it can be passed to others via shared surfaces such as doorknobs, chair backs, books, and toys.

Flu-Free Flying

Here’s the surprising-but-true example doctors use: Did you know you’re far more likely to catch a cold from touching an infected person’s water glass and then wiping your eye or picking your nose than you are from drinking a sip of the sick person’s water?
Knowing this, medical personnel recommend being as ingenious as possible in your efforts not to touch surfaces that many other people have also touched. One internist reported that she trained himself to push elevator buttons with her knuckles; a nurse mentioned he’s learned to open doors by pushing them with his elbow or forearm.

How to Stop a Cold originally appeared on Caring.com.

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Read more: Alternative Therapies, Cold and Flu, Fitness, General Health, Health, Natural Remedies, Women's Health

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Caring.com was created to help you care for your aging parents, grandparents, and other loved ones. As the leading destination for eldercare resources on the Internet, our mission is to give you the information and services you need to make better decisions, save time, and feel more supported. Caring.com provides the practical information, personal support, expert advice, and easy-to-use tools you need during this challenging time.

364 comments

+ add your own
7:59PM PST on Feb 5, 2012

good info, thank you for sharing!

7:37AM PST on Dec 25, 2011

prevention is the best way to go!

12:01PM PST on Dec 24, 2011

Most of the advice I read here is good and solid. However, as a doctor, I wasn't too happy reading this:

"Dextromethorphan works in the brain, rather than having a physical effect on the lungs or throat. It raises the threshold at which you feel like coughing."

Cough is annoying, yes. BUT it's there for a reason: to try and get all the mucous secretions out from your lungs and bronchi. If you suppress the brain's ability to recognise the amount of mucous it needs to clear out, these secretions will just built up in the lungs and raise the odds of developing a bacterial infection.

I am not a supporter of cough syrup, I think it's just money going down the drain. Drink lots of fluids: the mucous secretions will liquify faster, you'll spit them out easier and the coughing will stop.

5:16PM PST on Dec 20, 2011

Good info. Thanks

7:44PM PST on Dec 19, 2011

Thanks for this great article ;-)

9:05AM PST on Dec 19, 2011

Thanks!

12:08PM PST on Dec 18, 2011

All commmon sense and should be a lifestyle for all health issues

12:03AM PST on Dec 18, 2011

Timely article. Thanks for the info that will help me avoid &/or treat the miseries of the common cold and to prevent escalation into far more serious illness of pneumonia. I would like to take a pass this year on colds & flu, if possible.

7:01PM PST on Dec 17, 2011

thanks

1:25AM PST on Dec 17, 2011

I haven't been sick in years & now this month I have twice! had an issue. The first I thought was a cold & then finally had to go to the dr for antibiotics - turned into a 3 week ordeal. 2 weeks later I'm sick again. This time I socked echinachea, vitamin C & sleep to it - much better in just 2 days.

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