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posted by chromas on Saturday October 06 2018, @10:40AM   Printer-friendly
from the give-that-rampancy-an-antibiotic! dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

Clinicians prescribed antibiotics without an infection-related diagnosis nearly half of the time and one in five prescriptions were provided without an in-person visit, according to research being presented at IDWeek 2018. The study, which is the first to look at overall outpatient antibiotic prescribing, analyzed more than half a million prescriptions from 514 outpatient clinics.

Previous research has found antibiotics often are prescribed for certain symptoms (such as a sore throat or cough) when they shouldn't be.

Most of these types of illnesses are caused by viruses and therefore don't benefit from antibiotics, which only treat bacterial infections.

"We looked at all outpatient antibiotic prescribing and results suggest misuse of these drugs is a huge problem, no matter the symptom," said Jeffrey A. Linder, MD, MPH, lead author of the study and chief of the Division of General Internal Medicine and Geriatrics at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago. "We found that nearly half the time, clinicians have either a bad reason for prescribing antibiotics, or don't provide a reason at all. When you consider about 80 percent of antibiotics are prescribed on an outpatient basis, that's a concern."

[...] Of the 20 percent of antibiotics that were prescribed outside of an in-person visit, most were by phone (10 percent). Others were via an electronic health record system that allows prescription writing but there is no opportunity to gather information about symptoms or testing (4 percent), refill (4 percent) and online portal (1 percent). There are some cases where that may be appropriate, such as for women who suffer from recurrent urinary tract infections or teens taking antibiotics for acne. Researchers will analyze which of those prescriptions were appropriate in the next phase of research.

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 06 2018, @01:04PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 06 2018, @01:04PM (#745021)

    People are walking Petri dishes. Everyone has something chronic. Most develop a fever after some mild bad weather since it sets those infections off and the body responds in kind. Others has tooth aches since their roots are infected but not bad enough to pull out all their teeth. Others get muscle and bone aches with a few properly diagnosing those things as tendonitis and whatnot...

    After a few years in the real world doctors pick up on the habit of prescribing antibiotics to the people who routinely develop fevers and/or are in pain for everything since it's safer that way. It's bad since it builds up antibiotics resistant bacteria. But it's easier than prescribing pain medication / sick days.

    And yeah. placebo effect and whatnot...