Sunday 21 May 2017

Antibiotics - When You Need Them & When You Don’t

Antibiotics are strong medicines that can kill bacteria. But because we overuse antibiotics for many years. As a result, we now have bacteria that resist antibiotics. Resistant bacteria cause infections that are harder to cure and costlier to treat.

Antibiotic-resistant infections can strike anyone. They can be passed on to others. A lot of healthy young people are getting skin infections from MRSA, some bacteria that resists many common antibiotics. MRSA is spreading in households, daycare, schools, camps, dorms, gyms, team sports, and the military. Try to protect yourself and your loved ones. Here’s what you need to know to help prevent resistance:

Taking Antibiotics Makes You More Likely To Get A Resistant Infection In The Future:
Sometimes you need antibiotics to prevent or treat an infection. But half of antibiotics treatments are not needed.
It is normal to have bacteria on your skin and in your body. Many bacteria are harmless. They can even keep you healthy. When you use an antibiotic, it kills most bacteria, including the friendly ones. But a few bacteria survive. These resilient bacteria can multiply and take over.

Antibiotics Have Side Effects:
Many people die from severe diarrhoea caused by antibiotics. Few other side effects include vaginal infections, nausea and vomiting. Serious allergic reactions include blistering rashes, swelling of the face and throat, and breathing problems.

Resistant Infections Cost a Lot:
Resistant infections usually need more costly drugs, more medical care or longer hospital stays. It costs over $40,000 extra to treat a resistant bloodstream infection in one hospital patient. Resistant infections cost $20 billion each year.

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