Deep search
Search
Images
Videos
Maps
News
Shopping
Copilot
More
Flights
Travel
Hotels
Notebook
Top stories
Sports
U.S.
Local
World
Science
Technology
Entertainment
Business
More
Politics
Any time
Past hour
Past 24 hours
Past 7 days
Past 30 days
Best match
Most recent
The Most Common COVID Symptoms Doctors Are Seeing In Winter 2025
According to Dr. Dawn Nolt, a pediatric infectious disease physician at Oregon Health and Science University, many of the most common COVID symptoms are the ones we all know well at this point, like cough and shortness of breath. You may also have a fever, chills, congestion, runny nose, sore throat and body aches, Snyder said.
Flu Symptoms to Watch Out For as Winter Illnesses Surge
Symptoms usually come on suddenly, according to the CDC, and can include fevers above 100.4 degrees F, dry cough, sore throat, runny nose, body aches, headaches, chills and occasionally nausea, vomiting or diarrhea.
How to protect yourself from norovirus, COVID-19, flu and RSV during the winter surge
There’s no medication for norovirus. Instead, you’ll need to rehydrate as much as possible with water and other liquids. Seek help if you are dehydrated and notice you have a dry mouth and throat, aren’t urinating as much or feel dizzy when you’re standing up.
RSV, flu, COVID-19 and norovirus are on the rise in 2025. What to know
While there is a whole host of viruses going around, there are thankfully no new viruses to fret about—the ones we have are bad enough.
COVID-19, the flu, norovirus and RSV: How to prepare for this cold and flu season
Here are some ways to prepare for this cold and flu season as four illnesses circulate the country at one time.
Norovirus, COVID, flu and RSV: The common symptoms and how to protect yourself
In the winter months, it seems few are safe from some kind of illness — flu, COVID-19, norovirus, colds. While many of the germs that cause this misery can circulate throughout the year, scientists think that the winter surge of flu and cold activity may be because we spend more time indoors and the cold,
Are your symptoms the flu, COVID, RSV, Norovirus? How to tell the difference
Flu season is here in New Jersey, but other illnesses are in full swing in the Garden State. Here are the symptoms and how long you're contagious.
What’s Making Me Sick- Cold, Flu, Norovirus Or COVID-19?
Cold, flu, norovirus, and COVID-19 share overlapping symptoms like fever, cough, and fatigue, but differ in severity and duration. Handwashing, vaccines, and staying home when sick can help prevent infections.
1d
on MSN
The COVID Symptoms to Watch For in 2025
Historically, COVID-19 symptoms have been fevers or chills, cough, shortness of breath, cough, congestion or a runny nose, ...
11h
on MSN
Covid-19 survivors at a higher risk of chronic fatigue syndrome, study finds; check out symptoms
A recent University of Utah Health study found that 4.5% of Covid-19 survivors developed chronic fatigue syndrome, a ...
News Medical on MSN
1d
COVID-19 dramatically raises the risk of developing ME/CFS
Study highlights a fourfold increase in ME/CFS risk among COVID-19 patients, with 89% of post-COVID ME/CFS cases overlapping ...
4d
Paxlovid improved long COVID symptoms in some patients, researchers report
A report on the experiences of 13 patients found that the drug had no benefit for some and that some who benefited said the ...
WBAL TV Baltimore on MSN
11d
COVID-19, the flu, a common cold or allergies? Here's how to tell
More than 86% of Maryland's flu cases are influenza A. The state has what the CDC considers to be "high" levels of the virus.
HealthDay on MSN
1d
Vaccination Does Not Impact Long COVID Neurologic Symptoms
Vaccination prior to COVID-19 infection does not significantly affect neurologic symptoms in patients with long COVID.
10d
on MSN
HMPV cases in India: How is it different from COVID-19? From symptoms to vaccine — Key facts to know
The fear over the spread of the HMPV virus has led to concerns that it will trigger a Covid-19-like health emergency. Is HMPV ...
22h
on MSN
COVID-19 infection experience can alleviate or increase fear, depending on severity
Researchers at University of Tsukuba have found that contracting COVID-19 significantly affects fear levels. Mild cases tend ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results
Feedback