Athlete Survival Guide to Cold and Flu Season – Updated 2019

This week I worked with my long-time co-author, Jim Rutberg, to review and update this article on keeping athletes healthy during cold and flu season. Every year I encounter athletes who have a false sense of invincibility because exercise=health. And while being an athlete and consuming an athlete’s diet does generally improve your health, training and lifestyle stress can really affect your resistance to illness. – Chris Carmichael

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By Jim Rutberg

What were the last 5 objects or surfaces you touched? When was the last time you touched your face or put something in your mouth? How long has it been since you washed your hands? See where we’re going with this? If you’re like a lot of people, you don’t spend a lot of time thinking about what you’re touching from moment to moment, but during cold and flu season these habits can make a big difference in your ability to stay healthy.

I’m not a germophobe and I don’t think athletes – or any reasonably healthy people, for that matter – need to seal themselves in a bubble to avoid germs. You have an immune system for a reason, and it generally works well. That said, cold and flu season presents some unique challenges to an athlete’s immune system, so a bit more vigilance is a good idea. As an athlete, training sessions can suppress your immune system, making you more susceptible to infection for a day after training or up to 3 days following harder, more stressful training sessions. Hard training blocks can have the same impact, even if the individual workouts are relatively short (1-2hrs each).

Here’s a list of precautions you should take

  • Wash your hands frequently, especially before eating. Regular soap and water work wonders.
  • Use hand sanitizer if you can’t wash with soap and water.
  • Get a flu shot. Consult your physician first, of course. Some athletes who are generally healthy resist getting a flu shot because they don’t have a compromised immune system. But getting the flu will knock your training back by at least two weeks and a flu shot not only protects you, it helps protect more vulnerable people you come in contact with. If you have questions about flu vaccinations, consult the 2018-2019 Flu Season FAQ from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
  • Minimize time spent in crowds, especially indoors and in small spaces. Be especially careful around gym equipment and group training classes.
  • Try not to touch your face or put your fingers in your mouth or nose.
  • Don’t share food or drinks with friends, and avoid communal foods (chips, dips, nuts, candy, etc.)
  • Stay hydrated. Mucus membranes in the nose and throat don’t work as well when they’re dry, so staying hydrated helps your natural defenses work better.
  • Sleep more! Even if you can add one more hour of sleep to your normal routine, the added recovery makes you less susceptible to infection.
  • Reduce lifestyle stress. All stress (training, lifestyle, nutrition, etc.) takes a toll on immune function, so if you’re training hard make an extra effort to reduce stress in other areas.

Pro-level precautions

There’s an additional list of precautions we give elite athletes, especially during high-stress periods of training or in the final weeks leading up to an important event (like a once-a-year World Championship or once-every-four-years Olympic Games). If you have a major competition coming up, these might be worth incorporating in the final 14 days beforehand. Note, these are just cold/flu precautions. There are additional recommendations for avoiding food-borne illnesses before major events.

  • Don’t shake hands. If you need to physically greet someone, use a fist bump to restrict contact with another person to the backside of your hand.
  • Always have your own pen. Whether it’s for autographs or signing a credit card receipt, at least you know where your pen has been.
  • Carry your own flatware: Those disposable, packaged flatware sets from take-out restaurants are a great option.
  • Drink bottled beverages you can open yourself, which can include a reusable bottle of your own. Drink straight from the bottle to minimize contact with reuseable glassware.

What about nutrition?

Nutrition plays a role in protecting you from getting a cold, but mostly from the standpoint of supporting your activity level so that you’re not energy deficient. Athletes who are proactively trying to lose weight can be at particular risk because they are often training hard and restricting calories, which can negatively impact immune system function.

How about supplementation?

A lot of athletes swear by Vitamin C. The science around consuming a large quantity (Emergen-C contains 1000mg ascorbic acid) of vitamin C has been debated since Linus Pauling first suggested it should be used to prevent and reduce the severity of the common cold. Review studies that aggregate the results of previous research indicate it might work, but that it’s more likely to work in children and populations under higher amounts of stress… like athletes in training!

Vitamin D has also been linked to immune function. A review study in 2018 found there’s no simple yes/no answer to whether Vitamin D levels affect a person’s risk of developing respiratory infections and the flu, or whether Vitamin D supplementation reduces the risk. They did conclude, however, that the available research does not exclude the possibility it is effective. Vitamin D is produced by the body from exposure to the sun. In winter, people spend less time outside and have less exposed skin when outside. Sunscreen use can further diminish the production of Vitamin D. This is not as much of a concern in the summer when overall sun exposure is higher, but may have a meaningful effect in the winter.


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So, should you supplement with mega-doses of Vitamin C and Vitamin D? In principal (and for the reasons discussed below) I would rather athletes increase their intake of vitamin-rich foods. Consuming more foods rich in Vitamin C – including citrus, peppers, kiwi, strawberries, and dark green leafy vegetables like kale – also mean an increase in your fruit and vegetable intake. Vitamin D is primarily found in seafood, particularly salmon, sardines, cod liver oil, and oysters. Eggs and fortified dairy products are a good source for lacto-ovo vegetarians, and vegans can consume Vitamin D in fortified foods as well as mushrooms. A 2018 review study showed exposing mushrooms to UV-B radiation – including sunlight – can generate a nutritionally useful amount of Vitamin D. Some brands of store-bought mushrooms may also be irradiated to increase Vitamin D content.

But since we’re talking about supplements…

A word of caution

Supplements, over-the-counter cold and flu medications, and prescription medications for cold and flu may contain substances on the WADA Prohibited Substances List. USA Cycling, USA Triathlon, and other sports’ governing bodies are stepping up testing of amateur and age group athletes. This is a great step forward in the fight against doping, but for a lot of amateur athletes anti-doping regulations aren’t top-of-mind when buying herbal supplements, cold medication, or filling a doctor’s prescription. If you’re going to participate in competitions, even if you’re a 50-year-old mid-pack Cat 4, you should be following both the spirit and the letter of the rules. The safest route is not to take any supplements (they are unregulated, may be contaminated, and may not contain what is listed on the label), consult the USADA Athlete Guide, and check any medication you plan on taking – even the ingredients in over-the-counter cold and flu medications – against the prohibited list and the Global DRO (drug reference online). If you really want to take supplements, consult USADA’s Supplement 411 resources and consider supplements that are NSF Certified for Sport®.

If you do get sick

In light of the warnings above, the best things an athlete can do to combat the common cold are get more rest, stay well hydrated, and wait it out. Tamiflu, the medication that may reduce the duration and severity of the flu if taken within 48 hours of onset, is not on the 2019 WADA Prohibited List. If you have a fever or are ill enough to consider taking cold medication, rest is going to do you more good than training. If your symptoms are all above the neck, a recovery-paced ride may help you feel better, but if your symptoms are below the neck stick with rest. When in doubt… rest. Return to light training once you’re asymptomatic for at least a full day, and in the days following that don’t try to make up for lost time by piling on extra training volume or intensity. Too much workload too soon after an illness puts stress on an already overworked immune system and you’re more likely to get sick again.

Jim Rutberg is a Pro Coach with CTS and co-author of eight books on training and sports nutrition, including “The Time-Crunched Cyclist” and “Training Essentials for Ultrarunning”.  


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Comments 17

  1. Pingback: How to Protect and Boost Athlete's Immune System - CTS

    1. Hand washing is literally the first thing on the list, right under the heading “Here’s a list of precautions you should take”.

  2. Vern and Peter,
    I am over 80 and NEVER had the flu until about your age. Then I got it and while suffering I was thinking…hey, this can kill you! Really! Always got shots after that and never got the flu again. I suggest a shot. But it is your call…
    Good luck
    Tajamid

  3. Avoiding Dr’s offices and hospitals etc unless absolutely required is another good way to avoid getting colds and flu, those places are full of air-born and contact point bugs this time of year.

  4. I always get a flu shot. New strains appear every year. The shot protects against the 3 or 4 strains predicted to hit the US this year and lessens the severity if you do get the flu. And it’s not too late to get the shot as the flu season can continue into May. I’ve read where exercising before or after the shot may actually help your body create more flu-fighting antibodies.
    Keep your fingers from your face, nose and eyes. Works for me.

  5. Flu shots are worthless and potentially dangerous. Only 10% effective this year! Some studies show they reduce your immune system in the years following the shots.

    1. Your numbers are incorrect (check CDC data) and your judgement is even worse. Dumb.Dumb. Dumb. DDBJr and taking them annually at 85.

  6. Testing for cat4 50 yr olds? Unbelievable. The sporting world must genuinely hate cycling. No other sport indures such hypocracy.

  7. Too late as well…I was just getting into good form again when I cam down w this cold 3 weeks ago. I haven’t been sick in a whole year and this one got me…I think I got it from the grand children. Got to do these things more diligently…

  8. Flu shots have worked for me. Used to be I’d have one or 2 episodes a winter, with slow recoveries. No more! Knock wood…

  9. This article comes too late. I am ill since new year’s day. Getting better now. Lost 10 days of training. Fortunantely at my level this does not impact me a lot 😉

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