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Your doctor is prescribing antibiotics that won't help - and may harm

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Much has been made of the global rise in antibiotic resistance and its impact on the delivery of effective treatment, with good reason. The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that the misuse and overuse of antimicrobials, an umbrella term for medications that kill bacteria, parasites, viruses and fungi, is the main driver in the development of drug-resistant pathogens.

A new study by researchers from the University of Michigan (U-M), Northwestern University, and the Boston Medical Center examined US doctors' antibiotic prescribing habits between 2017 and 2021, during the peak period of the coronavirus pandemic, and uncovered some troubling patterns.

"Our study shows the decline in exposure to inappropriate antibiotic prescriptions during the pandemic was only temporary," said lead author Kao-Ping Chua, a pediatrician and health care researcher in the Department of Pediatrics at the U-M Medical School.

The researchers analyzed prescriptions for antibiotics dispensed to 37,566,581 American children and adults, 51% of whom were female. For each prescription, they looked at any new diagnosis given to a patient on the day a prescribed antibiotic was dispensed or in the three days before dispensing. If the diagnosis, or diagnoses, didn't justify the use of antibiotics, it was classified as inappropriate.

What they found was telling:

"Our findings highlight the continued importance of quality improvement initiatives focused on preventing unnecessary antibiotic prescribing and antimicrobial resistance, which kills 48,000 Americans per year," Chau said.

It's worth reiterating the dangers of antimicrobial resistance. Not all antibiotics are effective against all types of bacteria. So, when a life-threatening infection is caused by a bacterium that's resistant to an antibiotic that would ordinarily kill it, that severely limits treatment options and results in significant morbidity and mortality. Further, while scientists and researchers are always looking, discovering new antibiotics rarely happens, so essentially, we're stuck with what we've got.

The best way to contain antimicrobial resistance is to prevent infections in the first place. That includes practicing good hygiene and infection prevention and control procedures and taking vaccines that directly block the transmission of pathogens that cause infections, reducing the chance that a pathogen will mutate to a drug-resistant form.

Remember: Take antibiotics exactly as prescribed, and always take the entire course (don't skip doses). Don't save antibiotics for the next time you get sick. Don't take antibiotics prescribed for someone else. And, don't take an antibiotic for a virus.

The study was published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.

Source: Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

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