Daily Nation Newspaper

Patients need rest, not antibiotic­s, say health officials

-

LONDON - More patients should be told to go home and rest rather than be given antibiotic­s, according to health officials.

Public Health England (PHE) says up to a fifth of antibiotic prescripti­ons are unnecessar­y as many illnesses get better on their own.

Overusing the drugs is making infections harder to treat by creating drug-resistant superbugs.

PHE says patients have "a part to play" in stopping the rise of infections.

It is estimated:

• 5, 000 people die in England each year as a result of drug-resistant infections

• Four in 10 cases of bloodstrea­m E. coli infections now cannot be treated with first-choice antibiotic­s

• By 2050, drug-resistant infections around the world are expected to kill more people than currently die from cancer Antibiotic­s are vital in cases of sepsis, pneumonia, bacterial meningitis and other severe infections.

But PHE says antibiotic­s are not essential for every illness.

Coughs or bronchitis can take up to three weeks to clear on their own, but antibiotic­s reduce that by only one to two days, it says.

Prof Paul Cosford, medical director at PHE, told the BBC: "We don't often need antibiotic­s for common conditions.

"The majority of us will get infections from time to time and will recover because of our own immunity."

He said patients should not go to their doctor "expecting an antibiotic." Instead, for infections that our body can handle, the advice is to:

• have plenty of rest

• use pain relief such as paracetamo­l

• drink plenty of fluids

Prof Cosford said: "A doctor will be able to tell you when an antibiotic is really necessary.

"The fact is if you take an antibiotic when you don't need it then you're more likely to have an infection that the antibiotic­s don't work for over the coming months."

The Keep Antibiotic­s Working campaign will also see patients handed leaflets explaining how long it normally takes to recover and the warning signs of serious illness.

Apocalypse Bacteria are incredibly cunning - once you start attacking them with antibiotic­s, they find ways of surviving. People have died from bugs resistant to all antibiotic­s.

England's chief medical officer, Prof Dame Sally Davies, has already warned of a "postantibi­otic apocalypse."

If the drugs fail, then not only do infections become harder to treat, but common medical procedures such as caesarean sections and cancer treatments could become too risky.

The most serious drug-resistant infections are sent to PHE's laboratori­es at Colindale, north London, for analysis.

Prof Neil Woodford, the site's head of antimicrob­ial resistance, said the most potent antibiotic­s, like carbapenem­s, were failing more often. He told the BBC: "If we go back to 2005/07, we were seeing these bacteria in maybe two to four cases per year.

"Last year we confirmed these resistant bacteria in over 2,000 cases."

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zambia