COVID-19 - Patient Resource Page

NOTE: The key to health success is working with your team of medical professionals. This page and Bubl Health act as supplements to care from a qualified and licensed physician.

Curated by Siddhi Patil

Start here - General COVID-19 Information

Symptoms of Coronavirus: CDC

Coronavirus: WHO

Covid-19: ECDC

Johns Hopkins Medicine Video: What is Coronavirus? 

Johns Hopkins Medicine Video: How Coronaviruses Work

Nucleus Medical Media Video: How COVID-19 Affects the Body

How COVID-19 Spreads

Understanding Vaccine Options

A new website will connect people with leftover COVID-19 vaccines by sending texts when a shot is going spare

How to Get a Covid-19 Vaccine: a State-by-State Guide

Vaccines for COVID-19

Information about the Moderna COVID-19 Vaccine 

Information about the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine

Information about the Johnson & Johnson Vaccine

Treatments Your Healthcare Provider Might Recommend if You Are Sick

Treating COVID-19 at Home: Tips for Yourself and Others

Coronavirus (COVID-19): What To Do If I Feel Sick

If You’ve Been Exposed To The Coronavirus

Communicating About COVID-19 Vaccine Safety and Risks

Preventing the Spread: Masks, Social Distancing, and More

Prevent Getting Sick

Guidance for Wearing Masks

Still Confused About Masks? Here’s the Science Behind How Face Masks Prevent Coronavirus

Respirators, Surgical Masks, and Face Masks

How to Properly Wear A Face mask: Infographic

Social Distancing

Coronavirus, Social and Physical Distancing and Self Quarantine

How to Protect Yourself and Others

Frequent Questions About Hand Hygiene

Hand Hygiene During Covid-19

Variants of COVID-19

About Variants of the Virus That We Know Cause COVID-19

SARS-CoV-2 Variant Classifications and Definitions 

COVID-19 Variants: What’s the concern? 

New Variants of COVID-19: What You Should Know

Programs and Resources

COVID-19 Data Tracker

COVID-19 Resources

Engaging Community Based Organization to be Vaccination Partners

Using Data and Maps to Inform Vaccination Distribution and Implementation

Equitable Vaccine Implementation: Reaching People Where They Are

Community Based Testing Sites for COVID-19

Health Research and COVID-19 Clinical Trials

Caring for or Living With Someone Who Has COVID-19

Caring for Someone SIck at Home

How to Care for Someone WIth COVID-19

Living With Someone Who Has COVID-19

14 THings to DO if Someone You Live With Has COVID-19

Cleansing and Disinfecting Your Home

Improving Ventilation in Your Home

Maintaining Mental Health During Quarantine

Coping WIth Stress

Taking Your ‘Mental Health’ Temperature During COVID-19

COVID-19 and your mental health

Tips from Patients

When or someone you live with has tested positive for the virus, designate a room or a few rooms where that person can adequately quarantine themselves until they recover fully. 

When a member of your household has tested positive for the virus, keep them quarantine to one area. When giving them food, try to serve it in paper plates, bowls, and cups and try to give them plastic spoons and forks to use as utensils. This way, they can immediately throw them away and mitigate flow of the virus. Another way is to just allocate specific utensils to those that are sick in your house and keep washing them. 

If a person is sick and isolated in your house, provide them with a large trash bag so they can dispose of tissues, food, or anything else without contaminating common areas of the house.  

When you learn that you or someone you live with has tested positive for the virus. Quarantine the infected people and then deep clean the rest of the house. Be sure to pay extra attention to door knobs, drawers, and other commonly touched items. Wash all of the dishes and clean bedsheets. Make sure to deep clean once again after the affected people have recovered with absolute certainty. 

Getting sick from COVID-19 is highly likely to be far worse than what you expect, so socially distance and wear a mask. Don’t take this virus lightly. 

When a patient has the virus, it can be mentally distressing for them as they are locked away in their own home. Provide the patients you are caring for with something to do or talk to them via video-call. It can make the experience less boring and disheartening. 

DISCLAIMER: Bubl Health website, videos, and other media do not provide medical diagnosis, treatment, or advice. Although we strive to give up-to-date information, no guarantee to accuracy is made. Information contained here may NOT be used as a substitute for the advice of an appropriately—qualified and—licensed physician or other health care provider. The information provided here is for informational purposes only.