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If you find yourself feeling under the weather this spring, you may be asking yourself, “Do I have COVID-19 or allergies?”
While both can make you feel miserable, the good news that it’s usually easy to tell the difference between COVID-19 and allergies.
How COVID-19 and allergies are different.
Allergies develop as a result of your immune system responding to an external trigger, such as food, dust, pollen, or something else. Anyone can develop allergies at any point in their life, but they’re not contagious.
In contrast, COVID-19 is a contagious virus that spreads through respiratory droplets passed through the air. COVID-19 can also be transmitted when someone touches a surface or object touched by an infected person.
COVID-19 often causes a fever, while allergies don’t.
If you have seasonal allergies, you shouldn’t experience a fever. And, in general, allergy symptoms are mild compared to COVID-19 symptoms, which may be similar to cold and flu symptoms. Common COVID-19 symptoms may include:
- Coughing
- Fever
- Fatigue
- Diarrhea or nausea
- Loss of taste or smell
COVID-19 symptoms can last between two to fourteen days, which is why it’s important to follow safety precautions to minimize the risk of spreading it. However, it’s important to know that not everyone experiences these symptoms when they’re sick with the virus. In fact, some people who test positive for COVID-19 don’t experience any symptoms at all.