Is It Possible To Get The Same Cold Twice?

Updated Oct 20, 2025 | 12:48 PM IST

SummaryYes, you can catch the same cold twice. Experts say this depends on how strong your antibody response is after the first infection. If your body produces weak antibodies or doesn’t build lasting immunity, reinfection can happen within weeks. Genetics, immune strength, and vitamin D exposure also affect how often you fall sick.

Credits: Canva

Did you also wake up with a mild cold? A sneeze, blocked nose and a sore throat. It is worse because you had just shaken off the miserable cold and your energy was finally coming back and then now again you are sneezing. So, now the question is, could you really get the same cold twice, or is it just your bad luck?

As per the National Health Service, UK (NHS), adults could get an average of 2 to 4 colds a year. The NHS, UK notes that the viruses behind them behave in a complicated way. This is because some mutate quickly, and some stay in your system. This is why your body's ability to fight them off can differ depending on how well does your immune respond.

could you get the same old twice?

Catching The Same Cold, Twice

Conventionally, it is believed that once you have a virus, your body recognizes it and does not let you catch the same virus again. However, this is not the case, always.

Professor Brain Ferguson, who is the professor of viral immunity at the University of Cambridge told Yahoo UK, that it is possible to catch cold twice. This is due to the levels of antibodies that we have in our system.

Ferguson says, "It depends on the quality of the antibodies that your body generates when you get infected the first time. Sometimes your body might make really good ones, and that will stop you being reinfected with the same virus later. But another person might not, and they can catch the same virus, exactly the same one, again later."

The expert further added, "It is also down to the actual molecules, and the constituents of the virus, like proteins and things you make antibodies against. The longer they exist in your body, the better the antibody response tends to be."

This means that the cold can stay in your system, and the longer it stays the better your immune system will be prepared to build up a stronger defense.

Reinfection Time: How Long Does It Take?

If you had two colds very close together, you may not have had enough time to build immune response the first time. Ferguson says, "Reinfection can be very fast."

"It can be as soon as a couple of weeks if the antibody response is very weak... You might pick up a virus and get a few minor symptoms, but fight it off really quickly. In that case, you get much weaker antibodies that fight the virus, which means the same virus appears in your system again very quickly."

This means your body only has a "fleeting encounter" with the virus and thus it won't remember it well enough to protect you the next time. However, a more severe cold may trigger a stronger immune response, which can work as a longer-lasting protection.

Why Some People Catch More Often?

This has something to do with genetics. This is because of their immune system, how good it works against different infections. As Ferguson says, "Some people are just naturally better or worse at fighting off viruses or bacteria due to their genetic makeup."

While it is believed that multivitamins and supplements can help "boost" immunity, Ferguson says that the evidence is mixed.

There’s not a great evidence base for [vitamins] for repeat infections," he says. However, Ferguson adds there is evidence that people who spend more time outside and get more vitamin D tend to have a slightly better-functioning immune system.

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Harvard Physician Sue Goldie Finally Reveals After 4 Years About Her Parkinson's Disease

Updated Oct 20, 2025 | 05:26 PM IST

SummaryHarvard professor Dr. Sue Goldie lived with Parkinson’s disease in silence for four years before revealing her diagnosis. As she told NPR, she needed time “to fall apart, to panic, to think about what it meant.” For her, silence was self-preservation, a way to accept, understand, and adapt before the world knew. Read on to know her complete story.
Harvard Physician Sue Goldie Finally Reveals After 4 Years About Her Parkinson's Disease

Credits: Harvard TH Chan

"I wouldn't use the word hide," said Dr Sue Goldie to NPR, she is a professor at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, who has finally told the world after four years about her Parkinson's.

She learned about her diagnosis in 2021. She told NPR, "I think I was really trying to give myself room and time to fall apart, to panic, to think about what it meant for me.” For Goldie, silence wasn’t secrecy, it was self-preservation.

She revealed she needed space to understand to first accept that it is happening with her, and secondly to understand how to live with a condition that would alter her movements, her voice, and even her sensing. So she calls the 4-year-gap of not telling anyone as a "process of figuring out how I could be OK."

Parkinson's Disease: How Does It Start?

We often read about Parkinson's disease, what is it, and what it does to someone. However, what we do not talk a lot about is how it starts. We don't talk about the subtle signals one's body sends.

Goldie says it started with a tremor. It was so slight, that it was almost invisible. Then, a running coach mentioned her off cadence. The New York Times (NYT) reports that a trainer noticed her left arm did not lift properly in the pool. Eventually, afterwards, her fingers began twitching. Goldie, then was 50.

She was also at the height of her academic career and was newly obsessed with triathlons. She was in fact, training for Ironman races, reported NYT.

When tests confirmed Parkinson’s, a degenerative neurological disease that affects movement and coordination, her first reaction was disbelief. Then fear. Would her students notice? Would colleagues see her differently?

The diagnosis left her confronting an identity crisis. At what point, she wondered, does a disease become who you are?

Sue With Parkinson's, Who Lived Two Lives

Goldie began to divide her world. At Harvard, she was the confident professor and global health leader, still producing intricate teaching materials and mentoring students. In triathlons, she was freer, surrounded by people who saw her as an athlete, not a patient.

But the effort to maintain that balance came at a cost. As reported by NYT, early mornings were the hardest: walking unsteadily to the bathroom before medication took effect, hiding tremors from colleagues, managing the dopamine pills that controlled her symptoms. “You have no idea how hard it is to trick you into thinking I’m OK,” she later said.

Eventually, she could no longer keep it private. “Starting today, I am Sue with Parkinson’s,” she decided. Most of the people in her professional life would learn about it through her story.

The Camera For Healing

When Goldie's hand tremors made writing impossible, she began to record thousands of video diaries. They were often short, unfiltered glimpses of her daily struggle, which were filmed in her office, car, or home. Sometimes, calm, sometimes in tears.

Her videos began with a "Hello Sue", talking to her future self. In one video as posted by the NYT from 2023, she confessed, “I’m trying hard to do all this stuff that will help, but I’m not feeling OK... I just need to not be alone with it.”

Goldie refused to stop training. Her research had shown that exercise helps manage Parkinson’s symptoms. So, she doubled down, calling herself “an N of 1” — a one-person experiment. She adapted creatively: pink tape on her hands to guide her swim strokes, modified gear on her bike so she wouldn’t lose balance.

In 2022, she completed the Lake Placid Ironman, a 140.6-mile challenge. She crossed the finish line after collapsing, crying, and reapplying lipstick. Her small team called her S.F.G., with the middle initial standing for an unprintable word that captured her spirit.

As her symptoms progressed, Goldie’s fears shifted from physical decline to the erosion of identity. Parkinson’s, she realized, isn’t just about tremors; it’s about dignity, perception, and the quiet grief of being misunderstood.

She worried about whispers at Harvard, about whether others would still see her as capable. When she finally told university leaders, she felt both vulnerable and relieved.

Still, her mission remained unchanged. “I can’t change this,” she told The New York Times in 2024. “So what happens when I get worse?”

She continued teaching, designing, and mentoring. Her hands might tremble, but her mind stayed sharp. “I want to get things done while I’m still the best me,” she said.

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Can You Get Your Covid And Flu Shots At The Same Time? Experts Explain

Updated Oct 19, 2025 | 10:17 PM IST

SummaryLearn how to safely get your COVID and flu shots at the same time, which vaccine options to consider, and the best timing for flu protection this season. Stay informed on side effects, benefits, and expert guidance for keeping yourself healthy during the respiratory virus season.
covid and flu shot at the same time

Credits: Canva

Flu season has arrived, and while the summer wave of COVID-19 has subsided, a winter increase is expected. Vaccines are available for both viruses, prompting many to ask about timing, especially if they haven’t received their shots yet. With the CDC updating guidelines, rules around vaccination are constantly evolving, so the most common question is: can you get your COVID and flu shots at the same time?

Can You Get Your Covid And Flu Shots At The Same Time?

The COVID-19 vaccine can be administered alongside a seasonal flu shot for those who prefer to get both at once. It is considered completely safe. “There are no recommendations against it; it mainly comes down to personal preference,” Dr. Mike Ren, an assistant professor of family and community medicine at the Baylor College of Medicine explained. He added that some people may experience mild fatigue with vaccines, and getting multiple shots at the same time could slightly increase that effect.

Many people are already familiar with how their bodies react to flu and COVID-19 vaccines. The COVID shot can sometimes cause soreness in the arm, so it’s recommended to avoid getting both vaccines in the same arm if that happens. For those who experience minimal side effects, there’s no disadvantage to receiving both shots at the same visit. Some choose to space them out simply based on convenience.

Which Covid Shot To Get?

For individuals who have experienced strong reactions to the Pfizer or Moderna mRNA COVID vaccines, the Novavax shot, which uses a more traditional protein-based method may offer an alternative with fewer temporary side effects, according to Caitlin Rivers, an infectious-disease epidemiologist and senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.

Males aged 12 to 29 may particularly consider Novavax, as it carries no known risk of myocarditis, a rare heart inflammation sometimes associated with mRNA vaccines. Andrew Pavia, a pediatrics infectious-disease physician at the University of Utah, noted that myocarditis cases linked to mRNA vaccines are generally mild, and COVID-19 itself poses a higher risk of heart complications.

Pavia also explained that there are no major differences between the current Moderna and Pfizer vaccines, so people can choose whichever is more convenient or available.

When Should You Get A Flu Vaccine?

The ideal time to get a flu vaccine is generally from late September through October. Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, recommends aiming to be vaccinated before Halloween, in line with CDC guidance.

While many pharmacies begin offering flu shots as early as July or August, Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious disease specialist at the University of California, San Francisco, advises waiting a bit longer. This is because vaccine protection can wane after a few months, and flu cases often peak between December and February.

Even if you miss the early window, it’s still worthwhile to get vaccinated. “Some protection is better than none,” Dr. Chin-Hong emphasizes.

Staying up to date with both COVID-19 and flu vaccinations is an important step in protecting your health during the respiratory virus season. Getting the shots at the same time is safe and convenient for most people, though minor side effects like fatigue or soreness may be slightly increased.

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New Covid ‘Frankenstein’ Variant Might Be Behind Your Tooth Pain; NHS Warns of New Symptom

Updated Oct 20, 2025 | 02:00 AM IST

SummaryA new COVID-19 variant has been linked to unusual symptoms, including discomfort in areas not typically associated with respiratory infections. While the strain generally causes mild illness, health officials are highlighting these emerging signs to help people recognise infection early and take precautions. Keep reading for more details.
covid frankenstein new symptom

Credits: Canva

Nearly five years after the COVID-19 pandemic began, new variants of the virus are spreading again, bringing with them some unusual symptoms. The main strains currently circulating are called Stratus and Nimbus. According to the NHS, Stratus, which includes the XFG and XFG.3 variants, has caused a 60 percent rise in Covid hospitalisations.

As cases increase worldwide, one woman who recently tested positive described this infection as the “worst it’s ever been.” With more people falling sick, the NHS continues to update its warnings and guidance.

Could That Toothache Be ‘Frankenstein’ Variant?

A woman from the US, Nev, shared on TikTok that she began feeling slightly unwell on August 30, with mild congestion and one blocked nostril. The next day, she noticed a scratchy throat and continued congestion, but later that night, her symptoms worsened as she experienced pain in her teeth, jaw, and head. Her post quickly drew comments from others who said they had also suffered similar symptoms while infected with Covid.

The Stratus strain has been linked to a sudden hoarse voice, while the Nimbus strain often causes severe throat pain described by some as feeling like “swallowing razor blades.” Health officials in the UK have warned that Covid is still leading to serious illness and deaths and have urged people to stay alert to new and unusual symptoms.

Frankenstein Variant Symptoms

The “Frankenstein” variant, officially known as Stratus (XFG), is a recombinant form of the Omicron strain of COVID-19. Its symptoms often resemble those of a seasonal cold or flu. While most infections are mild, some patients have reported unusual signs such as sudden hoarseness or a raspy voice.

Common symptoms include:

  • Fever
  • Sore throat
  • Cough
  • Runny or blocked nose
  • Fatigue and body aches
  • Headache
  • Digestive issues

Are Frankenstein And Stratus Variant Same?

The Frankenstein variant and the Stratus variant refer to the same strain of COVID-19, officially known as XFG. The nickname “Frankenstein” emerged because the variant is a recombinant of multiple Omicron sublineages, essentially a genetic mix that combines traits from different versions of the virus. The scientific name Stratus (XFG) is the formal term used by health authorities such as the UKHSA.

According to the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), anyone showing symptoms of a respiratory infection such as COVID-19, especially if they have a fever or feel too unwell to continue daily activities should try to stay home and avoid contact with vulnerable people.

If staying home isn’t possible, the agency advises taking extra precautions to reduce the risk of spreading infection. This includes wearing a well-fitted mask with multiple layers or a surgical mask, avoiding crowded or poorly ventilated spaces, and opting for outdoor exercise where there is minimal contact with others. People are also urged to cover their mouth and nose when coughing or sneezing, wash their hands often with soap and water or use sanitizer, and avoid touching their face.

The simplest way to confirm if you have COVID-19 is by taking a test, which can be purchased at most pharmacies.

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