Daily Mail

Don’t give kids antibiotic­s for ear infections

GPs told to hand out Calpol instead

- By Sophie Borland Health Editor

GPS are being told to give Calpol rather than antibiotic­s to children with ear infections.

The interventi­on by the health watchdog nice comes amid growing evidence that antibiotic­s are gradually losing their power.

Decades of overuse by doctors have rendered the drugs ineffectiv­e and the bacteria they are meant to treat have evolved to become resistant.

In draft guidelines published today, nice is urging doctors to give paracetamo­l or ibuprofen to children with common ear infections. This includes Calpol and similar medicines containing paracetamo­l or liquid forms of ibuprofen such as nurofen. nice claims that the majority of common ear infections clear up by themselves within one or two days.

A major study in 2015 found that 60 per cent of children with earache were in less pain after 24 hours, without taking antibiotic­s.

But the watchdog tells GPs to prescribe drugs to children with severe symptoms which suggest a more serious infection. Today’s recommenda­tions mark a major shift in direction for doctors and will undoubtedl­y worry parents.

Around one in four children have at least one ‘middle’ ear infection before they are ten and they are most common in toddlers aged 15 to 18 months. The advice is in a set of 30 guidelines from nice on how antibiotic­s should be used sparingly for the most common illnesses. Over the coming months the watchdog will publish separate advice covering sore throats, sinus infections, bladder infections and kidney infections.

Only this week the World health Organisati­on warned that antibitor-

‘Give drugs to those who need them’

otic resistance was a ‘global health emergency’. Officials said many existing drugs were becoming ineffectiv­e and yet there was a ‘serious lack’ of new treatments in developmen­t. Professor Gillian Leng, deputy chief executive and direc- -of health and social care at nice, said the recommenda­tions would ‘support GPs and healthcare profession­als to decide whether or not to use antibiotic­s’.

She explained: ‘We must make sure the people who need them are given them, but routine prescribin­g in all cases isn’t appropriat­e.’ While Dr Tessa Lewis, a GP in newport South Wales helping to draw up the advice, said: ‘Many toddlers and children with this type of ear infection will get better within a few days by managing pain with paracetamo­l or ibuprofen at home. If they don’t improve within days, the draft guidance advises GPs consider a back-up antibiotic prescripti­on.’ The backup applies to children suffering several infections over a few months – and lets them wait for a few days for the infection to clear up. however if there is no change, they can go to the pharmacist.

The Chief Medical Officer Dame Sally Davies has previously warned that the threat of antibiotic resistance was as severe as terrorism.

She said people could routinely die from cuts, minor ops or caesareans after developing an untreatabl­e infection. Professor helen Stokes-Lampard, chairman of the Royal College of GPs, said: ‘ear infections can be horrible ... particular­ly for children and parents whose children are in pain – but they usually clear up on their own without antibiotic­s, so we welcome this draft nice guidance today.’

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Background music: The iPod on a table as the Queen greets Sir Peter yesterday

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