A GP has raised concern about a key sign that may show you have Covid rather than a cold or flu. Winter illnesses often look alike, which makes it hard to tell them apart, and getting the right diagnosis is important for proper care. Dr Rupa Parmar, GP and medical director at Midland Health, explained that there are certain clues that can help people understand what they are dealing with. She advised that anyone unsure should check with their doctor, as it is safer to ask than ignore a concern.
Dr Parmar noted that shortness of breath stands out as a sign of Covid. It rarely appears in a cold or flu, but it is common with Covid because the infection tends to affect the lungs and cause inflammation. The NHS also lists breathlessness as a sign linked more strongly with Covid than with flu or a cold. This symptom is also seen in conditions such as respiratory syncytial virus. In some cases, people with the flu who do not recover and worsen may develop breathing trouble if they develop complications such as pneumonia.
She added that coughs appear in all three infections, but they do not sound the same. A cold usually causes a light cough, flu tends to bring a dry one, and Covid usually causes a dry, ongoing cough. Many people with Covid cough for more than an hour or have several episodes of coughing through the day.
Another clue is a change in taste or smell. Dr Parmar said this sign is more specific to Covid. A sudden loss of taste or smell, or even a noticeable change, is more likely linked to the coronavirus. She explained that the pattern of symptoms often helps point to the right illness. A mild cough and sore throat usually fit a cold, a fever and strong fatigue suggest flu, and a loss of smell or taste with a steady cough point to Covid.
She also noted that the start of symptoms can differ. A cold tends to appear slowly, flu symptoms usually show up quickly within a few hours, and Covid can begin with mild signs that grow stronger over time. A cold mainly affects the nose and throat, while flu and Covid can cause symptoms across the body.
Even though there are no formal self-isolation rules anymore, the NHS advises people to stay home and limit contact with others if they or their children have symptoms and either have a high temperature or feel too unwell to manage daily activities at work, school, or home. The NHS states that people can return to their usual routine once they feel well again or no longer have a high temperature.
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In India, around 95 percent of kidney transplants and a significant proportion of liver transplants depend on living donors—primarily family members. While live donation can be lifesaving, it transforms a medical crisis into a family ordeal.
Parents feel obligated to donate to their children, spouses face immense pressure, and siblings also navigate complex emotional stress. This decision is typically free from the weight of duty, guilt, and family expectations. I have seen young professionals delay their careers, mothers hide their own health concerns, and elderly parents risk their lives—all because we lack a robust deceased donor program.
Moreover, the real challenge lies with living donors. Donors face surgical complications, long recovery periods, and potential long-term health consequences. While we counsel families about these risks, the urgency of their loved one's condition often overshadows rational decision-making.
Despite the introduction of the Transplantation of Human Organs Act and necessary amendments in India, the decrease in organ rates continues to remain abysmal—approximately 0.8 donors per million population, compared to 20 in the UK, 36 in Spain, and 33 in the United States.
Several deeply rooted factors explain this gap:
Cultural and religious misconceptions continue to persist. Many Indians also believe that the donation of organs conflicts with the religious beliefs regarding the sanctity of the body or rebirth, even though many religious institutions have endorsed organ donation.
The concept of brain death remains poorly understood; families struggle to accept that their loved one is dead when the heart still beats, and the chest rises on ventilator support. Families fear that clinical teams may hasten death to procure organs or that the wealthy will receive preferential treatment.
These anxieties, while often unfounded and deep-rooted, reflect legitimate concerns about transparency and equity in our healthcare institutions. We lack trained transplant coordinators, efficient organ retrieval networks, and standardized protocols across states.
When a potential donor is identified in a district hospital, the administrative maze often ensures organs go unutilized. Finally, public awareness is minimal.
Most Indians have never discussed organ donation with their families. Death remains a taboo subject, making advance directives about organ donation exceptionally rare.
Over 150,000 patients await kidney transplants; fewer than 10,000 receive them annually. Similarly, roughly 50,000 patients are listed waiting for a liver transplant nationally. For hearts and lungs, deceased donation is the only option, yet these transplants remain rare. Patients die waiting—not because medical expertise is lacking, but because organs are unavailable.
Our dependence on living donation also perpetuates inequality. Those without family networks, or
whose families cannot afford the medical evaluation and recovery costs for donors, are effectively excluded from transplantation. Deceased donation would democratize access.
Spain has the world's highest deceased donation rate, achieving success through a "Spanish Model" of dedicated transplant coordinators in every hospital, robust training programs, and a presumed consent system where all citizens are potential donors unless they opt out. Importantly, families are still consulted, but the default position favours donation.
Their success stems not just from infrastructure but from normalizing conversations about donation through media campaigns and school education programs.
A hybrid approach suited to Indian realities—combining elements of presumed consent with robust family consultation, investing in coordinator training, and launching sustained public awareness campaigns—could transform our landscape.
This transformation should be led by the government through several concrete actions:
First, invest in infrastructure. Every medical college and tertiary care center must have trained transplant coordinators and clear protocols for identifying and managing potential donors. State governments must establish well-funded organ retrieval networks with 24/7 operational capacity.
Second, Public awareness campaigns should be launched. Use television, radio, social media, and community health workers to educate citizens about brain death, the donation process, and the lives saved. Do a partnership with religious leaders to dispel the myths. Make organ donation part of school curricula.
Third, ensuring transparency and equity alongside establishing clear and publicly accessible waitlist protocols. To prevent commercialization, strict oversight from the government is recommended. Transplant programs must build trust by indicating that the system works for everyone, not just the privileged.
We must reframe organ donation from an extraordinary act to a normal, expected part of medical care at the end of life. This requires: Open family conversations and discussing their wishes regarding organ donation with the loved ones, also removing the burden of decision-making during the grief.
Celebrity and community leadership: When a pledge to donate is made by public figures, it enables a gradual shift in thought and practice.
Media responsibility: Gifts of life should be highlighted by news coverage, humanizing donors and recipients while respecting their privacy.
Medical community engagement: Doctors should initiate sensitive conversations regarding donation with families of brain-dead patients, considering it as part of compassionate end-of-life care rather than an awkward position.
With world-class transplant surgeons, excellent medical infrastructure in urban centers, and a population of over 1.4 billion. We should not have patients dying for lack of organs, and programs being heavily reliant on living organ donations.
What we lack is collective will, bold government action, and public education. As a society, we take pride in seva (service) and daan (giving), and organ donation should align perfectly with our values. Let us make it so.
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In the world of oncology, we usually speak of battling or fighting cancer. We pool in our whole life’s earnings to find a cure or solution for the advanced stages of this disease. What if cancer were not a threat?
Here is one of the most common and deadly cancers, which is also one of the most preventable ones. We are talking about Colorectal cancer, which is often described by medical professionals as a preventable tragedy. This is because, unlike many other forms of the disease, we have a clear window of opportunity to stop it before it even begins.
As we observe Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month in March, it is time to strip away the fear surrounding the tests and understand why nobody should ever have to die from a condition that gives many chances to catch it well in time.
To understand why colorectal cancer is preventable, we have to look at how it develops. As with most cancers, this too doesn’t appear overnight. Almost always, these cancers start as small growths called polyps or precancerous lesions on the inner lining of the colon or rectum.
These polyps are like seeds; they are mostly benign. But there is one type of polyp that can gradually turn into cancer over a period of time. This is where the advantage lies. There is a long interval of time before polyps develop into cancer.
During this time, they can be removed if they are identified. If a doctor removes a precancerous polyp during a routine screening, they would not only have nipped the cancer in the bud, but would have also prevented it from occurring.
The statistics are encouraging when detected early, with figures showing that over 90 per cent of cases of colorectal cancer are fully curable. However, people do not seek medical attention until they experience some symptoms, at which point the seed-like polyps have already grown into a deep-rooted cancer.
In Western countries, the death rate from colorectal cancer has been declining at a visible rate due to the presence of strong and well-supported screening programs from their governments.
Although some countries have not yet introduced a formal national program, the consensus among medical experts is that if you are above 45 years of age or have high-risk factors, you need to take the initiative to be screened.
There are two primary ways we do this:
1. The FIT (Fecal Immunochemical Test) – This is a simple, non-invasive stool test that has become a staple in most general health check-up packages. It works by detecting tiny amounts of human hemoglobin (blood) that aren’t visible to the naked eye.
The advantage of getting a Fecal Immunochemical Test done is that it is very easy, and it can be done at home, and requires no special preparations. It acts as an early warning system. If a FIT result comes back high, it signals that something is happening in the bowel that requires a closer look via colonoscopy. It is recommended that everyone over 45 undergoes this test annually. While not as definitive as a colonoscopy, it is a vital first line of defence.
2. The Colonoscopy – This is the gold standard. Despite all the fear and misinformation that can be spread on the Internet, a colonoscopy is a routine and safe procedure. It allows a doctor to visually inspect the inside of the colon. It is a procedure that has dual benefits – to see what is wrong, and to make things right. Should the doctor find a polyp, it can be safely removed at the time of the procedure.
Many people avoid this procedure because of embarrassment and fear of discomfort. However, with the sedation, most people find it to be completely painless.
While screening is for people with no symptoms, you must be alert to signs that require an immediate expert opinion, regardless of your age. Also, never ignore these symptoms or assume that they are due to bad food choices:
The aim of Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month is not just to create awareness about the disease; it is also about providing support as we pay tribute to cancer warriors who have completed the painful journey from surgery and chemotherapy to rehabilitation. Shared stories can help remove the fear in others’ minds.
There is no such thing as too much information in the doctor’s office. Our bowels are part of our body, and we must overcome the shame or embarrassment associated with talking about them. A simple dialogue about bathroom habits or asking for a FIT test can save a life.
By promoting early detection leading to the removal of precancerous polyps, we can build a world where no one ever has to die from colorectal cancer. If you are aged 45 years or older, make this the month you arrange for a screening. If you have symptoms, do not wait; the right time is now.
In the case of colorectal cancer, prevention is not just the best medicine, it IS the cure.
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On No Smoking Day, we drive our focus to science-backed methods that can help one leave smoking. Smoking is one of the leading causes of preventable deaths worldwide. It also contributed to severe health problems, including cancer, cardiovascular diseases, and respiratory diseases. Even though many people are aware of this harmful consequences, many struggle to quit smoking. Mostly because it is a habit often associated to enjoying a break. Even when someone does not need it, their brain tricks them into believing that smoke is important for the break they are meant to enjoy.
However, there are several studies that have explored science-backed methods that could help one to quit smoke.
A study published in the journal Addiction, emphasizes three primary methods proven effective for quitting smoking: behavioral support, prescription medications, and nicotine replacement therapy (NRT). These strategies have shown varying levels of success in aiding smokers to quit permanently. In addition, alternative methods like e-cigarettes and mindfulness-based techniques have gained traction in helping reduce smoking addiction.
Quitting smoking is more than just a decision; it’s a commitment to significantly improving your health and well-being. Smoking has been directly linked to various cancers, lung diseases, and heart conditions. In the long term, stopping smoking can lower your risk of these life-threatening conditions.
According to the study, individuals looking to quit smoking should consider using Varenicline (sold as Chantix/Champix), Cytisine (a plant-based supplement available in Europe and Canada), or nicotine e-cigarettes.
“Quitting smoking is difficult, and some people find it harder to quit than others, but tobacco is uniquely deadly among legal consumer products, so it’s important to seek help quitting,” said lead investigator Jonathan Livingstone-Banks, a lecturer and researcher in evidence-based health care with the University of Oxford in the U.K.
Read: Does Smoking Affect Women Differently Than Men?
Quitting smoking isn’t just about resisting cravings. Often, behavioral support through counseling or therapy is crucial for tackling the psychological aspects of addiction. Behavioral therapy involves working with a trained professional to identify triggers, develop coping strategies, and create a tailored quit plan. Research shows that combining counseling with other quit methods can significantly increase success rates.
Some medications, such as varenicline (Chantix) and bupropion (Zyban), have been shown to help people quit smoking by reducing cravings and withdrawal symptoms. Experts suggest that varenicline works by blocking the effects of nicotine in the brain, while bupropion is an antidepressant that helps manage withdrawal symptoms. Both medications are generally more effective when combined with behavioral therapy.
Nicotine replacement products, such as nicotine patches, gums, lozenges, and nasal sprays, deliver controlled amounts of nicotine to ease withdrawal symptoms. According to experts at Harvard Health, NRT can double the chances of quitting by alleviating physical cravings while the person works on overcoming the psychological addiction.
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