4.5 Review

Health management of patients with COVID-19: is there a room for hydrotherapeutic approaches?

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOMETEOROLOGY
Volume 66, Issue 5, Pages 1031-1038

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00484-022-02246-w

Keywords

COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; Hydrotherapy; Alternative medicine; Thermal waters

Funding

  1. FEDER (European Fund for Regional Development), European Union

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With the highly variable symptoms of COVID-19, there is a need for early and individualized rehabilitation strategies. Hydrothermal centers can provide alternative treatments for COVID-19 patients, integrating alternative medicine, respiratory care, physical activity, and psychological support in relaxing environments under medical supervision.
With highly variable types of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) symptoms in both severity and duration, there is today an important need for early, individualized, and multidisciplinary strategies of rehabilitation. Some patients present persistent affections of the respiratory function, digestive system, cardiovascular function, locomotor system, mental health, sleep, nervous system, immune system, taste, smell, metabolism, inflammation, and skin. In this context, we highlight here that hydrothermal centers should be considered today as medically and economically relevant alternatives to face the urgent need for interventions among COVID-19 patients. We raise the potential benefits of hydrotherapy programs already existing which combine alternative medicine with respiratory care, physical activity, nutritional advice, psychological support, and physiotherapy, in relaxing environments and under medical supervision. Beyond the virtues of thermal waters, many studies reported medical benefits of natural mineral waters through compressing, buoyancy, resistance, temperature changes, hydrostatic pressure, inhalations, or drinking. Thermal institutions might offer individualized follow-up helping to unclog hospitals while ensuring the continuity of health care for the different clinical manifestations of COVID-19 in both post-acute and chronic COVID-19 patients. Our present review underlines the need to further explore the medical effectiveness, clinical and territorial feasibility, and medico-economic impacts of the implementation of post-COVID-19 patient management in hydrotherapeutic establishments.

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