You have been diagnosed with chronic bronchitis. With this condition, you cough up mucus for 3 months or more each year for at least 2 years in a row.
Home care
Here is how you can take care of yourself at home:
Quit smoking, if needed
If you smoke, get help to quit. This is the best thing you can do for your bronchitis and health.
- Try a stop-smoking program. There are even telephone and online programs.
- Ask your doctor about medicines or other methods to help you quit.
- Ask family members to quit smoking as well.
- Don't allow smoking in your home, in your car, or around you.
- Don't use e-cigarettes.
Protect yourself from infection
- Wash your hands often. Do your best to keep your hands away from your face. Most germs are spread from your hands to your mouth or nose.
- Ask your doctor about the flu and pneumonia vaccines.
- Stay away from crowds. It's very important to do this in the winter when more people have colds and flu.
- Take care of your overall health. That means:
- Getting about 8 hours of sleep every night.
- Exercising for at least 30 minutes on most days.
- Eating a variety of healthy foods. These include protein foods, dairy, vegetables, fruits, healthy fats, and whole grains
- Limiting highly processed foods, added sugars, and refined carbohydrates, such as packaged snacks, sugary drinks, and white bread.
- Limiting the amount of alcohol you drink.
Work with your doctor
- Take your medicines exactly as directed. Don't skip doses.
- Talk with your doctor about ways to keep your mucus thin. Drinking a lot of water helps.
- Talk with your doctor about long-term oxygen therapy. You may be asked to measure your oxygen levels with a small device that clips onto your finger, called pulse oximetry. Your doctor will instruct you when to use oxygen if needed if levels become too low.
- Ask your doctor to show you pursed-lip breathing. It can help decrease shortness of breath.
- During each care visit, talk with your doctor about your ability to:
- Cope in your normal environment.
- Correctly use inhaler techniques (or your medicine delivery systems) to make sure you are doing them right.
- Cope with other health problems you may have, including the medicines you take for them and how they might affect your chronic bronchitis.
- Find out about pulmonary rehab programs in your area. Ask your doctor or local hospital. Also talk to your doctor about a self-management program to help control your symptoms.
Follow-up care
Follow up with your doctor as advised.
When to call your doctor
Call your doctor or seek medical care right away if you have:
- Increased coughing.
- Increased mucus.
- Increased shortness of breath with the same or less activity.
- Thick yellow, green, or bloody mucus.
- A fever of 100.4ºF (38ºC) or higher, or as directed by your doctor.
- Chills.
- Swollen ankles.
Call 911
Call
- Worsening shortness of breath, wheezing, or trouble breathing that doesn't get better with treatment.
- Tightness in your chest that doesn't go away with your normal medicines, or as directed by your doctor.
- A new, irregular heartbeat or feeling that your heart is racing.
- Trouble talking.
- A feeling of lightheadedness or fainting.
- A feeling of doom.
- Skin that turns blue, gray, or purple in color
Online Medical Reviewer: Chris Southard RN
Online Medical Reviewer: Rajadurai Samnishanth Researcher
Online Medical Reviewer: Rita Sather RN
Date Last Reviewed: 10/01/2024
© 2000-2026 The StayWell Company, LLC. All rights reserved. This information is not intended as a substitute for professional medical care. Always follow your healthcare professional's instructions.
