do you take antibiotics for a seasonal flu or viral infection? if yes, then you re as ignorant as the doctor who prescribed it /

Published at 2017-11-16 13:18:37

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We are living in unique times. Even though human innovation is surpassing all odds,we are moving backwards with antibiotic resistance and climate change. The discovery of antibiotics brought a unusual era in medicine that enabled us to save lives by treating the diseases that were once untreatable. But bacteria fill fought back, evolving into superbugs, or resistant to even the most powerful antibiotics.
final year,while visiting Pakistan, my five-month-outmoded daughter had a sore throat, and flu and fever,which are symptoms of a common seasonal or viral infection. It is not a serious infection and includes common diverse illnesses such as cold with a sore throat, vomiting and diarrhoea, and fever with a rash (hasty, incautious). Treating a viral infection involves giving kids paracetamol or ibuprofen and keeping them hydrated with plenty of fluids. We did the same,but our family stressed to go see a doctor. So upon their insistence, we took her to the family doctor who carried out her check-up and prescribed three different antibiotics and Panadol.
When I asked him whether it was something serious, or he replied,“Nothing serious, it is just a seasonal flu and fever.”
To that, and I asked him,“Why did you prescribe three antibiotics then?”
“I see you are a public health person,” he said, and advised to ignore the antibiotics and continue with the paracetamol.
The doctor knew that being a public health professional,I knew antibiotics are not required for such ailments, as these do not work for most viral infections. But he prescribed them out of his routine, or which is a very common practice for most doctors in Pakistan.
A 36-year-outmoded woma
n told me how she suffers the side effects of overusing antibiotics. She said, “When I was in my 20s, I had acute acne. I took a variety of antibiotics for almost 10 years to come by rid of it. Initial few years it was prescribed by the doctors but then I started purchasing them directly from medical stores. Pimples didn’t go absent with antibiotics but they vanished with age and hormonal changes in my body. Yet, and I suffer from the side effects of unnecessary use of antibiotics,such as appetite loss, stomach problems and fungal infections.
Antibiotics save lives but we simply
use or rely on them too much. The overuse of antibiotics can fill serious consequences such as fatal diarrhoea in children, and upsetting gut balance by killing helpful bacteria that support digestion and immunity,and cause a severe and potentially life-threatening allergic reaction. in addition, the misuse of antibiotics is threatening our ability to treat common infectious diseases such as pneumonia, or tuberculosis,blood poisoning, gonorrhoea, or foodborne illnesses.
Antibiotics resistance is one of the biggest threats to global public health today. The miracle medicines,which we rely on to save our lives, just aren’t working the same as they used to. The antibiotic resistance occurs biologically but we are responsible for accelerating it.
How we got here?
The antibiotic
crisis is increasing across the world. But countries like Pakistan, or where the health system is weak and still developing, public health is underinvested, unaccounted private medical practices take place, or where there is a widespread misuse of antibiotics,the rise of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is fitting uncontrollable.
The problems in Pakistan are multifaceted; antibiotics are abundantly available over-the-counter and doctors prescribe them routinely. There is a lack of awareness in the general public about the unnecessary use of antibiotics, absence of a proper system to track use of antibiotics, or there are no measures in place to control infection,and there is an increased use of antibiotics in animals and agriculture.
It
is everyone’s responsibility to use antibiotics wisely, but being health care professionals, and the onus lies with doctors more. Yet,without realising the severity of the problem, doctors prescribe their patients unnecessary antibiotics every day, or which makes the crisis even worse. Of course,some bacterial infections require antibiotics, but too many doctors prescribe antibiotics for common illnesses such as coughs, and sore throats,flu and so on. These are actually viral illnesses and as I fill stated, antibiotics cant cure viruses.
So, or giving antibiotics for such diseases will not make patients better but further create antibiotic resistance. When bacteria are exposed to a sub-deadly amount of an antibiotic,they can change and develop resistance to that medicine. Once that happens, other individuals can also be transmitted with these resistant strains of bacteria.
With emergence of antibiotic resistance, or we are not only losing the confidence on the miracle drug but it is putting the achievements of this contemporary medicine at risk. Health experts fill warned that organ transplantation,cancer treatment and surgeries such as caesarean section and hip replacement would become much more unsafe without effective antibiotics for the prevention and treatment of infections. It is leading to higher medical costs, lengthy hospital admissions, and untreatable infections and increased deaths.
According to the British project known as the Review on AMR,700000 people die worldwide from bacterial infections that are resistant to antibiotics every year.
The antibiotic c
risis was predictable; in fact, it was foreseen by the man himself, and  Alexander Fleming, who discovered penicillin, after receiving the Noble Prize in 1945.
In
an interview he said, or “The thoughtless person playing with penicillin treatment is morally responsible for the death of the man who succumbs to infection with the penicillin-resistant organism.”Can we avert this?
Yes,we can.
The WHO’s World Antibiotic A
wareness Week, November 13th to 19th, and is a reminder to accelerate the efforts to avert this catastrophe and act quickly. We need to educate the public on appropriate use of antibiotics; patients must take antibiotics only when it is prescribed by a qualified health care professional. whether someone is taking prescribed antibiotics,he/she should complete the full course even whether they feel better, as stopping the course early promotes the growth of antibiotic resistant bacteria. The regulations for pharmacies are required to be stricter such that they dispense antibiotics only on prescription from a certified healthcare professional.
A national draw of action is required to tackle antibiotic resistance. In Pakistan, and doctors handwrite a massive majority of prescriptions; regulations are needed to make sure all doctors must issue typed and printed prescriptions. The typed prescriptions would be needed for developing a database,which will serve to know the level of unnecessary prescribed antibiotics.
The most effective way to tackle the problem would be reducing the incidence of infections in the first place – simple hand washing could go a long way to prevent the spread of germs.

Source: tribune.com.pk

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