How to Get Rid of A Cough – 10 Home Remedies for Coughing

 

When soreness strikes your throat, the first thing you want to know is how to get relief, fast. Here are 7 remedies that will cure your scratchy, aching throat.
When a cough crops up, take an extra-long shower. “Being in a hot shower is the best thing you can do,” Leslie Mendoza Temple, MD, medical director at NorthShore’s Integrative Medicine Program, tells Health. “Stick yourself in there and let the steam soothe your breathing passages,” she says, adding that it helps reduce the over-excitement in your throat that stimulates hacking. It’s a great alternative when you’re trying to avoid giving kids (or yourself) cough medicine. There’s no hard-and-fast rule about how long you have to stay in, but take your time. Step out and dry off when your cough starts to quiet down.

If your cough stems from allergies, your first step should be effectively treating those allergies and avoiding your triggers. One good option is a neti pot, which washes away pollen from the mucous membranes in your nasal passages, explains Dr. Mendoza Temple. Just make sure to use the neti pot safely—that means with sterile water (water that’s been boiled and cooled down, or distilled water).

Allergies get all the attention in spring, but they can be just as vicious in the fall—or even year-round if you have pet or dust allergies. “If you want to live with your pet, you have to remove the allergens from your nose,” she says. Filters that remove allergens from the air can also help. Take a shower after doing fall yard cleanup to rinse off any allergens.
 
Once you master slow-cooker chicken broth, you’ll never need (or want) to buy the packaged stuff again. In this video from Cooking Light, learn how to make flavorful broth in your Crock-Pot with celery, onion, carrots, parsley, and garlic. You can freeze the extra broth in a muffin tin to get perfectly portioned servings to use whenever you’re making soups and stews.

Warm tea and other hot liquids like soup are inherently soothing to an angry throat. “When you soothe the area, your body will stop trying to expel anything out,” says Dr. Mendoza Temple. Hence, sipping tea throughout the day can help suppress coughs.
According to Dr. Mendoza Temple, you can use any tea that you like—that’s important since that means you’re more apt to drink it regularly. But if you want something specific, go for slippery elm or marshmallow root tea. (Buy them separately or in teas labeled Throat Coat, which contain licorice root, slippery elm, and marshmallow root.) “These herbs are very soothing to the tissues they touch,” says Dr. Mendoza Temple.
 
Your mom would probably tell you to get some rest to get rid of your cough–and she’d be right. Sleep may not be a fancy herbal cure for a cough, but the basics are just as important. “Sleep helps the body accomplish what needs to be done in terms of [getting better],” Termeh Feinberg, PhD, MPH,  Postdoctoral Research Fellow at University of Maryland Center for Integrative Medicine.
 
Similarly, sipping water is another “mom” remedy you’re told constantly when you’re under the weather, and with good reason. Staying hydrated supports your system’s ability to eliminate pathogens or viruses. Plus, just like drinking tea or eating soup, water will soothe a dry, scratchy throat.
 
For those times when you get a little tickle in your throat and think Uh, oh, I’m getting sick, go for oregano oil. Dr. Mendoza Temple recommends this fix, but fair warning: “It’s bitter and it burns.” Apply one drop to each side of your tongue and let it trickle back into your throat. Initially oregano oil might make you cough, but ultimately, it suppresses the hacking. The herb helps kill germs and flags the immune system to go after the area. “This has really helped prevent me from getting coughs and losing my voice. I have many patients that swear it works too,” she says.
 
Just like a shower can do wonders for a cough, so can a steam treatment with eucalyptus oil. Fill your sink with very hot water and a few drops of eucalyptus oil, place a towel over your head, and put your head over the sink. Breathe deeply for 10 minutes. The eucalyptus oil will help break up nasal congestion, while the steam will moisturize a dry throat. (You can also put a few drops of the oil in a humidifier, says Dr. Mendoza Temple, but remember to clean out the unit per the manufacturer’s directions.)

As soon as Feinberg feels a sore throat and gets a cough, she grabs an Oregon grape root tincture. “This botanical contains berberine, a phytochemical with anti-inflammatory properties,” she explains. You can squirt it in your mouth straight (“This isn’t for the faint of heart!” says Feinberg), or mix it in seltzer water, since the fizziness can also feel nice on a scratchy throat. HerbPharm is one brand that Feinberg recommends for buying high-quality, safely sourced herbal extracts.
Before cold and flu season takes hold, stock up on a few herbs. Some good options: elderberry (it may have antiviral properties), chamomile (it’s an antispasmodic, meaning it stops your coughing reflex), mullein leaf (for its soothing abilities), and ginseng (to boost the body’s natural defenses against stressors, including illnesses). Feinberg throws about a tablespoon of these dry herbs into a tablespoon of honey and lets it steep over low heat on the stove. Then she strains the syrup through cheesecloth. You can take the liquid straight a few times per day or stir into a cup of tea.
 

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