ANTIBIOTICS: Times When You Can Avoid Taking These Medicines

These are the times when you can avoid taking antibiotics

ANTIBIOTICS – These medicines are known as antibacterials that destroy or slow down the growth of bacteria but there are specific times that you can avoid these.

It is already known to many people that it is not advisable to take these medications for colds, however, there are 4 other instances when you can skip taking antibiotics, according to the article from The Healthy.

antibiotics
Photo courtesy of MD Linx

Kids’ ear infection – According to ear infection treatment guidelines issued in 2016 by the American Academy of Pediatrics, kids under age 2 may not automatically need antibiotics to heal this ailment common to children. The reason for this is that the infection often clears up on its own. Parents should wait two to three days if the symptoms don’t disappear, then, that’s the time the medication will be taken.

Bronchitis – Jeffrey A. Linder, MD, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School said that this medication is more likely to hurt you than to do good to your body. Bronchitis, a respiratory infection that is usually viral is being treated with antibiotics. This treatment is being done to 80 percent of the patients that actually contribute to the resistance.

Sinus Infection – According to the article, 90 percent of the patient with sinus infection are prescribed to take antibiotics but since this is caused by viruses, the medication becomes useless. A study from the Journal of the American Medical Association supported this as it stated that patients with sinus infection did not manifest better conditions after taking this medication.

Bladder infection – According to preventive health expert David Katz, MD, director of Yale University’s Prevention Research Center, the bladder infection can be treated within 3 days. This is contradicting most of doctors’ prescription of weeks’ worth of antibiotics. The article added that giving the right antibiotic can cure over 90 percent of the cases.

READ ALSO: EXPIRED MEDICATION: Is It Still Okay To Take Them?

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