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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Would you go to A&E for a cough?

285 replies

LeopardPrint21 · 09/07/2026 14:05

Had a cough for 7 months. Have had some tests done for gastro as the GP initially thought acid reflux, have literally today been referred for chest x-ray and lung tests.

It has gotten to the point where I cannot stop coughing. Literally having fits of coughing every few minutes and this lasts from the minute I wake up until the minute I go to sleep and sometimes throughout the night too. I also feel unwell with it and I’ve felt unwell since the cough started at the beginning of the year. I feel like I can’t cough up whatever is there but I also can’t swallow it back down so it just feels stuck in my throat and all the constant coughing is leaving me feeling like I can’t breathe properly.

I have been in tears all day because I genuinely can’t go on like this, I dread every second of the day because of how bad it is. I am at my breaking point with it.

Would you go to the hospital for a cough that is constantly there and you’re never getting a let up from it along with everything else I’ve written?

OP posts:
AprilMizzel · 09/07/2026 16:40

You could try a pharmacy and ask the pharmacist for advice and meds.

Another option - and they may say A&E as well did to Dad before he died they were desperate not to go to a&e tried everything to avoid.

Though here you have to now book to see the * *pharmacist - we had to wait a day and take a cancellation - it's because local GP have sent so much work to them she's now flat out and fully booked.

MichLBee · 09/07/2026 16:41

I feel for you as I am similar. I have a hiatus hernia but my cough seems different to my usual one. I had it for months and at one point coughed up blood. I was referred for chest x-ray which showed nothing. My cough went on its own eventually but my doctor prescribed me some lansoprozale and advised me to also try some antihistamines. A&E will only refer you back to your GP and I suspect they won't do much either just yet as they have referred you to another department for tests. All they will be able to do is prescribe something to help with the symptoms I suspect. It's horrible and I really do sympathise.

pimplebum · 09/07/2026 16:41

LeopardPrint21 · 09/07/2026 14:08

Even if you were having coughing fits that left you almost vomiting every few minutes that lasted all day every day? And you felt unwell with it and unable to function as normal?

no

a and e is for emergency care - stitches plaster cast or admission to a ward for treatment - if you are in an asthma attack or copd. a and E can so nothing fir you

you need referral to a consultant who is expert in asthma or whatever it is that us wrong with you

Aluna · 09/07/2026 16:41

mindutopia · 09/07/2026 16:37

If you are struggling to breathe, yes, I would. Honestly, I can’t believe you’ve gone 7 months like this. This needed an x-ray and probably a CT scan about 6 months ago. My dad had coughing like this for about a year. Diagnosed with lung cancer (as a non-smoker) and he died at 54 only 3 weeks later.

Exactly, the c word is the background, but I don’t want to alarm the OP.

It’s more likely to be something chronic, but she needs to know at this point.

BellaPommefritio · 09/07/2026 16:42

@mindutopia sorry to hear that. The trouble is the months go by when you're just seen by the GP who can be treating it as chest infections/pleurisy etc (my experience) then you have an x-ray, then finally referred to consultant for ct scans, bloods etc- I think I had about 12 lots of antibiotics for chest infections over a year, there was a lot of best guesswork going on.

Letsgocamping67 · 09/07/2026 16:42

I had this exact cough for 18 moths. Was either wetting myself or vomiting with it. Awake half the night. GP ran all sorts of tests and said we don’t know why. Turned out to be allergic to ramapril a BP med. Changed that and cough went completely just like that.

Aluna · 09/07/2026 16:43

pimplebum · 09/07/2026 16:41

no

a and e is for emergency care - stitches plaster cast or admission to a ward for treatment - if you are in an asthma attack or copd. a and E can so nothing fir you

you need referral to a consultant who is expert in asthma or whatever it is that us wrong with you

A&E is to evaluate whether something is an emergency or not. Lay people are not expected to guess what is wrong and whether it’s serious. Even doctors can’t guess without doing tests.

If there are red flags and it could potentially be serious, you need to rule out nasties asap.

AprilMizzel · 09/07/2026 16:45

pimplebum · 09/07/2026 16:41

no

a and e is for emergency care - stitches plaster cast or admission to a ward for treatment - if you are in an asthma attack or copd. a and E can so nothing fir you

you need referral to a consultant who is expert in asthma or whatever it is that us wrong with you

if you are in an asthma attack or copd. a and E can so nothing fir you

WTF A& E do deal with asthma attacks - and there are things they can do.

If our blue inhailors don't work - we should be sent/go to A&E - it's part of our asthma plans.

Crazybigtoe · 09/07/2026 16:49

The benefit of going to A&E is that they are likely to give you a chest x-ray. If there is something on your lungs (eg mass etc) then they should spot it and then you would move to MRI as next step.

If it's been 7 months, what is it about today that's made it unbearable? Sometimes when you hear you are going for tests, then the anxiety can slip in and you might think you can know faster if you go to a&e. As per above, that might be the case (at least for the initial cxr).

Did the GP give you anything to help with the cough? Some things you can do is to sleep on your back and be elevated IE propped up against pillows.

Vinvertebrate · 09/07/2026 16:49

JFC how on earth has your GP managed to piss about for 7 months? Are you at least on a 2 week pathway now?

I think I would be getting a scan privately if not. Lots of private hospitals now offer this without a referral. If that’s not an option then I would go to A&E and insist on investigations. (I have done similar with DS and it eventually got him seen more quickly).

ACertainSenseOfLiberty · 09/07/2026 16:52

If you can't breathe of course you can go to A&E.

DH had a 100 day cough and refused to get tested for whooping cough. After 6 months he had a phone appointment and was given a nasal spray. Another couple of months and was given meds for bronchiectasis - and after a few months of no change an xray and spirometry and then a diagnosis of asthma. After a year of coughing non fucking stop all he needed was a basic inhaler.

Crazybigtoe · 09/07/2026 16:54

pimplebum · 09/07/2026 16:41

no

a and e is for emergency care - stitches plaster cast or admission to a ward for treatment - if you are in an asthma attack or copd. a and E can so nothing fir you

you need referral to a consultant who is expert in asthma or whatever it is that us wrong with you

FYI- advice from NHS website for asthma attack.

What to do:

-Sit up straight and stay calm.

-Take one puff of your reliever inhaler (usually blue) every 30–60 seconds, up to a maximum of 10 puffs.

-If you feel worse at any point or do not feel better after 10 puffs, call 999 immediately for an ambulance.

-While waiting for the ambulance, repeat step 2 after 10-15 minutes if necessary.

Asthma attacks can be life-threatening.

Boymum776 · 09/07/2026 16:54

I would go. All the posters saying ‘it’s not an accident or emergency’ ‘A&E won’t do anything.’

How could you possibly know that?! It’s so dangerous. If it’s affecting your breathing, you’re unable to function, low grade temp, fatigue. Go to A&E. They will run some tests.

ToohotToohotToohot · 09/07/2026 16:54

I am baffled why you have not been given a peak flow meter to test for asthma and an inhaler to see if it helps.

A&E would be able to offer you an inhaler to at least try it.

ToohotToohotToohot · 09/07/2026 16:55

Crazybigtoe · 09/07/2026 16:54

FYI- advice from NHS website for asthma attack.

What to do:

-Sit up straight and stay calm.

-Take one puff of your reliever inhaler (usually blue) every 30–60 seconds, up to a maximum of 10 puffs.

-If you feel worse at any point or do not feel better after 10 puffs, call 999 immediately for an ambulance.

-While waiting for the ambulance, repeat step 2 after 10-15 minutes if necessary.

Asthma attacks can be life-threatening.

Does OP have an inhaler?

Felldew · 09/07/2026 16:57

I went back and forth to the GP about my cough and intermittent temperature. Finally he sent me to A and E and I had pneumonia. It took ages to get better after it, but a couple of days on intravenous antibiotics got it shifted. I’d go to A and E

Merryoldgoat · 09/07/2026 16:58

Yes go. As a late-diagnosed asthmatic this is how I was diagnosed. I’d been coughing and having breathing issues for a few days and one night it got really bad and I had to get help. I was put on a nebuliser and given other meds.

You could have any number of things, both serious and not serious.

ThreadGuardDog · 09/07/2026 16:58

OP why on earth have to taken seven months to do something about this ? The guidelines are that if you have a cough that lasts more than 3-4 weeks you need to see a GP.

I’ve just asked a relative who is a senior nurse. She advises going straight to A&E as you are coughing so frequently you are at risk of developing severe breathing difficulties, and the fact that you can neither cough up or swallow back down whatever is there needs urgent investigation - coupled with a cough that is constantly triggering a gag reflex and you feeling generally unwell it, points to something underlying that needs a clinician to have eyes on it ASAP.

To posters advising OP that the GP knows best. Often they don’t. They are generalists and having twice received completely inappropriate advice which resulted in family members having to be admitted to hospital as emergencies, I trust what my instincts are telling me. A&E OP.

Merryoldgoat · 09/07/2026 16:59

Boymum776 · 09/07/2026 16:54

I would go. All the posters saying ‘it’s not an accident or emergency’ ‘A&E won’t do anything.’

How could you possibly know that?! It’s so dangerous. If it’s affecting your breathing, you’re unable to function, low grade temp, fatigue. Go to A&E. They will run some tests.

People think asthma is only from childhood and many think it’s a bit inconvenient rather than life-threatening condition.

Tryagain26 · 09/07/2026 17:00

MyGlassMenagerie · 09/07/2026 14:19

It’s neither an accident nor an emergency. Go back to your GP, repeatedly if needs be. Or seek private treatment.

It could become an emergency though as she says it is affecting her breathing. Also she could have pneumonia which can very quickly turn into sepsis. People have died from untreated pneumonia
OP I would do as PP suggested and phone 101

kittensinthekitchen · 09/07/2026 17:00

Kirbert2 · 09/07/2026 16:26

Coughs don't last for 7 months. Of course people shouldn't turn up to A&E with a typical cough that will probably last for a few days or a few weeks.

7 months is a different story.

THAT'S WHY SHE'S BEEN REFERRED FOR TESTS

ThreadGuardDog · 09/07/2026 17:03

kittensinthekitchen · 09/07/2026 17:00

THAT'S WHY SHE'S BEEN REFERRED FOR TESTS

And that doesn’t mean that she has to wait for the test results if she feels uunwell. She can neither cough up nor swallow back down whatever is there, she feels generally unwell and the cough is there constantly, and triggering her gag reflex. I wouldn’t hesitate to go to A&E.

kittensinthekitchen · 09/07/2026 17:04

@LeopardPrint21 does your practice have an asthma specialist? Has it been suggested that you book an appointment with them?

Crazybigtoe · 09/07/2026 17:05

ToohotToohotToohot · 09/07/2026 16:55

Does OP have an inhaler?

No idea- but this was in response to the ill informed poster who said don't go to a&E for asthma.....🥴

AprilMizzel · 09/07/2026 17:06

kittensinthekitchen · 09/07/2026 17:00

THAT'S WHY SHE'S BEEN REFERRED FOR TESTS

If while waiting for those tests if she gets worse - and she now feels she can't cope which suggest that's happened- normal practice is to seek further medical advice.

Is breathing is affected - it is a serious matter and A&E is appropriate - if Op not sure 111 to see what they can suggest.