Whatever the cause, coughs can be pretty irritating, interrupting your daily activities and even keeping you up at night. The good news?
Most coughs disappear within a few weeks, no matter what you do, says Olveen Carrasquillo, MD, MPH, professor of medicine and public health sciences and director of the Behavioral and Community Based Research Shared Resource Facility at the University of Miami's Miller School of Medicine in Florida.
In the meantime, you can try several strategies to feel better and breathe easier, at least temporarily, he says.
Below are 10 options worth trying to ease your cough during the day or at night.
If your cough is making it hard to function during the day or affecting your focus at work, you can try one of these remedies to help improve it.
Cough drops may help soothe a dry, irritated throat and can reduce the constant urge to cough.
Dont try this one with young children, since hard candies can be a choking hazard.
We all know sleep is the best medicine, especially when it comes to getting over a cold. If a nagging cough is keeping you awake all night, try these nighttime remedies to help you drift off.
Adding honey to a cup of tea is a time-honored way to soothe an irritated throat and calm a cough.
Simply mix teaspoon of salt into 8 ounces of warm water, gargle for as long as you can, then spit out the solution.
Michelle Seguin, MD, is a board-certified family medicine, lifestyle medicine, and certified functional medicine physician (IFMCP). She is a practicing physician at Root Functional Medicine, a leading telemedicine practice specializing in personalized, root-cause care.
Charlotte Libov is an award-winning health book author and journalist whose work has appeared in many newspapers and magazines throughout the country. Her books include Cancer Survival Guide, The Liver Cure, Fight Back: How to Beat the Coronavirus, A Woman's Guide to Heart Attack Recovery, and Beat Your Risk Factors.
She was working as a freelance contributor to The New York Times when she was diagnosed with a hole in her heart in 1990. Following successful open-heart surgery, she co-authored The Womans Heart Book, which was one of the first to focus on heart disease in women. The book became the basis for the award-winning PBS documentary Womens Hearts at Risk, which Libov helped produced.
Libov became a popular speaker on womens health issues and traveled across the country to deliver keynote talks on womens health for hospitals, schools, and businesses, including the American Heart Association, Duke University Medical School, Bio International, Toyota, and the U.S. Army. Libov has a bachelors degree with honors from the University of Connecticut and a masters degree in mental health counseling from the University of Oregon. She is passionate about photography and recently debuted in her own cabaret show.