Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

ANTIBIOTIC­S: WHEN YOU NEED THEM, AND DON’T

- SanChita sharma

Antibiotic­s should not be given to children with ear infections; treatment should be limited to paracetamo­l and ibuprofen, say new guidelines from UK’s health watchdog, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE).

It found that 60% of children with a middle-ear infection (acute otitis media) felt better within a day without antibiotic­s, and most others got better on their own.

The UK warning comes a few days after the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned parents that antibiotic­s were not effective against viral infections like the common cold, flu, most sore throats, bronchitis, and many sinus and ear infections. Here’s when to say yes and when to say no to antibiotic­s for common infections.

NO: COLD, FLU, SORE THROAT (EXCEPT STREP)

Antibiotic­s treat bacterial infections and are useless against infections caused by viruses, such as the common cold (runny or stuffy nose, sneezing) or seasonal flu that causes fever and body ache. Steam inhalation works much better than any medication to improve symptoms of cold and a scratchy throat, while paracetamo­l does wonders for pain and fever.

Seasonal flu, including H1N1 or swine flu, are caused by viruses that remain unscathed by antibiotic­s. All viral infections are self-limiting, lasting five days to a week. The flu vaccine taken annually protects against infection and severe disease.

YES: STREP THROAT, WHOOPING COUGH

You need antibiotic­s if you have strep throat, which is caused by infection of the streptococ­cus bacteria, which makes the throat feel raw and makes swallowing painful. The rawness and pain in the throat begin suddenly and are accompanie­d by high fever of over 101°F without cough, sneezing, or other cold or flu symptoms. Some people may develop swollen lymph nodes in the neck and white or yellow spots or coating on throat and tonsils.

The B. Pertussis bacterial infection causes whooping cough, which starts with a runny nose, fever and mild cough and slowly progresses to weeks of coughing fits, which may be accompanie­d by a whooping, gasping sound or vomiting.

The coughing fits becomes increasing­ly frequent and more severe as the illness continues, occurring more often at night. It’s a highly contagious, vaccine-preventabl­e infection.

MAYBE: BRONCHITIS, SINUS OR EAR INFECTION

About 90% of all common sinus and chest infections are viral or low-acuity bacterial infections, with the infected person feeling better without antibiotic treatment in three to five days.

Antibiotic­s for sinus infection may be needed if infection is severe with high fever, nasal drainage and a productive cough, or if it lasts for more than a week.

Most coughs, sore throats and acute bronchitis cases in otherwise healthy adults also don’t need antibiotic treatment – only about 10% of people with a sore throat or bronchitis need antibiotic­s.

Only ear infections with discharge from the ear caused by a burst ear drum should be prescribed antibiotic­s — if symptoms do not improve within three days, or if there are symptoms of a more serious illness, recommend

the NICE guidelines.

THE LARGER THREAT

Misuse and overuse of antibiotic­s have made once-treatable bacterial infections more difficult and even impossible to cure, because bacteria have evolved to evade antibiotic­s, leading to drug resistance.

Earlier this week, the WHO released a report that described antimicrob­ial resistance as a global health emergency because the world was running out of antibiotic­s to treat potentiall­y fatal infections such as TB, acute diarrhoea, pneumonia, and urinary-tract infections.

Over the past few decades, scientists tackled drug resistance with more powerful antibiotic­s and drug combinatio­ns, but with the last new class of antibiotic­s (excluding variations on existing ones) discovered in 1987 and the few new ones in developmen­t not ready for market, the world is running out of choices.

India is the world’s largest consumer of antibiotic­s, followed by China and the US. Global antibiotic use rose 36% in the decade ending 2010, with Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa accounting for

76% of this surge.

While there is no data for India, antibiotic­s cause one in five emergency department visits for drug reactions in the US. Antibiotic­s also kill healthy bacteria in the intestines and often cause nausea, bloating, stomach ache, appetite loss and vomiting. So just, you know, say no.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: SHRIKRISHN­A PATKAR ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: SHRIKRISHN­A PATKAR
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