Scottish Daily Mail

HOW TO KNOW IF YOUR SYMPTOMS ARE COVID

- By DR NICK SUMMERTON Dr Summerton has been a GP for 32 years and has written books focusing on diagnosis.

WORKING as a GP for the Covid Clinical Assessment Service, set up to manage patients who need to speak to a doctor after calling NHS 111, I chat to at least five patients an hour over the phone.

Based on what I am told, my advice will vary from calling an ambulance to suggesting they get tested, or stay at home and monitor themselves closely.

But symptoms are tricky blighters. They continuall­y change and the same symptoms can be caused by different problems.

The number of symptoms being recommende­d to identify those with Covid-19 is growing: the list now includes, as well as a dry cough and a raised temperatur­e (which is where we started), changes in a person’s sense of taste or smell, extreme tiredness, breathless­ness, loss of appetite, sore throat, diarrhoea, muscle pain and headache.

Perhaps the best way to spot people with Covid-19 is to think about symptoms in three broad groups: general viral symptoms, symptoms linked to the virus as it enters our bodies, and symptoms from organs that it might infect.

I have found that Covid-19 is more likely if an individual has at least four new symptoms from two or more of these groups. GENERAL VIRAL SYMPTOMS: (Occasional or continuous) fever or raised temperatur­e, chills with or without shaking, loss of appetite, fatigue or extreme tiredness, muscle/joint pains, headache, dizziness.

ENTRY SYMPTOMS: Alteration­s of smell or taste, soreness in the throat, sore eyes, nasal congestion or runny nose. ORGAN-SPECIFIC SYMPTOMS:

Lungs: dry cough, mild to moderate breathless­ness, heaviness on the chest. Guts: diarrhoea, vomiting, nausea.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom