Home nebulisers are often used for asthma, bronchitis or other breathing issues, especially in children and older adults. They can be very useful—but only when used correctly.
Always use the exact medicines and doses prescribed by your doctor. Don’t put random syrups or oils into the nebuliser chamber. Only sterile saline or prescribed solutions belong there.
Clean the mask/mouthpiece and chamber as instructed—usually rinsing, drying and occasional deeper cleaning. A dirty nebuliser can actually deliver germs into the lungs.
Sit upright during nebulisation so the medicine reaches better. For children, calm, distraction (stories, cartoons) helps them breathe normally and not cry the whole time.
Don’t increase the frequency or mix medicines on your own because “breathing is a little noisy.” If breathing worsens, there is chest pulling, severe cough, or bluish lips, that’s emergency territory—seek urgent care.
Nebulisers don’t replace regular check-ups or long-term management plans. Think of them as one delivery method, not the whole treatment.
