COVID-19 affects everyone differently, and it can leave you laid up for days or weeks. If a friend or family member is incapacitated with COVID-19 (or another, similar illness), it can be hard to know how to help them. It is difficult to spend time with them without risking exposure, but there are things you can do to make life easier for them.
Doing favors like grocery shopping, doing laundry, and dropping off activities can be very helpful for someone who is fatigued, achy, and fighting boredom. A common concern of those with COVID-19 is the inability to do small, everyday chores.
Frequent check-ins are a good idea to monitor how well they are recovering. Eric R. Goldberg, MD, an internist at 嘿嘿视频 Health, says that every household should have a thermometer to track fever and a finger-based pulse oximeter to measure a person鈥檚 blood oxygen. If you know a person with COVID-19 who doesn鈥檛 have these items, it鈥檚 a good idea to supply them.
鈥淚f they can鈥檛 finish a sentence without gasping for air or struggling for air, then that鈥檚 a sign that they鈥檙e not recovering according to plan,鈥 Dr. Goldberg tells The Washington Post.
Finally, sometimes the best thing to do for your loved one is to ask them what you can do for them. It lets them know that you care, and you don鈥檛 have to guess at what would be the most helpful.
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