Long-Hauler-Ideas

Ideas for Long-Hauler Recovery from COVID-19

There is currently no research on ways to recover faster if you have chronic symptoms after your initial COVID-19 infection. When this occurs, the best thing we can do is to use what we know to help restore the body as long as it does no harm. That’s the approach I used when putting this together.

Understand these recommendations are hypothetical, but they’re based on what we currently know. Much of it depends on the types of symptoms that you may have; deep muscle pain is not the same as a chronic cough or the loss of smell.

  • Try to get some exercise, preferably outdoors. Even brief stretching exercises, including deep breathing, are better than nothing. As you gain back strength and lung capacity, you can increase the amount and types of exercise, but it’s important to get blood flowing to the extent that you can.
  • Increase your intake of vegetables and fruits and decrease your intake of refined carbohydrates and saturated fats, especially from deep fried foods. Give your body the best nutrition that you can afford—it doesn’t have to be all organic. Raw fruits and vegetables are better because of the phytonutrients and the potential for beneficial bacteria.
  • Take these supplements that may help, depending on your symptoms. Use vitamin D for immune support; probiotics for the microbiome and immune support; high-DHA fish oil for any neurological issues including the loss of smell and taste; coenzyme Q10 for muscle fatigue and soreness; and a multivitamin-multimineral that contains plant concentrates. I know that there are a whole lot more antioxidants and herbs that you may hear about, but all of these have known functions they can benefit the organs involved.

That’s it. It sounds like the recommendations I always give: Eat less. Eat better. Move more. Well, there’s a reason for that; they really help you get healthy. The supplements target those body systems and organs to help their recovery as well.

One more thing: because the mental aspect of being a long-hauler is so tough, make an extra effort to do the things that make you happy but don’t take too much energy: video chat with your favorite people, wear your favorite or most comfortable clothes, listen to your favorite music, or get some sunshine even if it’s just putting on a coat and sitting outside for a few minutes. If prayer and meditation help you, be sure you make time for those.

Until the science and research catches up with the long-haul COVID-19 symptoms, this is the best approach I can recommend. This plan may work or it may not. But one thing is for sure: you’ll be getting better nutrition as a result.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet