The Medical Minute: Promoting a 'smart' approach to antibiotic use
Arizona Free Press
← Back to
Issues and Concerns
Antibiotics are used to treat a wide range of illnesses including some theyre not equipped to fight. The unnecessary prescriptions are often a result of undue pressures placed on parents and physicians.
Penn State Hershey Childrens Hospital is joining with the Pennsylvania Department of Health and Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare to remind parents, doctors and daycare providers of what antibiotics can -- and cant -- do. The Get Smart About Antibiotics campaign is designed to increase awareness about the appropriate use of the medications.
Dr. Nicole Hackman, a pediatrician at Penn State Hershey Medical Group Hope Drive, says antibiotics can successfully fight bacterial infections such as an ear infection, urinary tract infection or even pneumonia. But the medications are not effective against infections caused by a virus, such as the common cold and some ear infections. Hackman says its important to save antibiotics for when theyre truly necessary.
By using antibiotics properly, we keep all of our options open and hope to keep our antibiotic resistance rates lower, Hackman said. She adds, proper use also limits occurrences of potentially troublesome side effects such as vomiting and diarrhea.
Sometimes doing nothing is the best for the children, Hackman said. She notes that ear infections in children age 2 and older often will go away on their own within a couple days.
Despite all that is known about when antibiotics are effective and when theyre not, the drugs are sometimes prescribed at the urging of parents who feel overwhelming pressure to get back to work. The need to stay at home with an ill child can translate into lost wages, and that can lead to frustration which, in turn, leads to pressure exerted on the parents and the pediatrician.
Antibiotics sometimes are seen as the ticket back into daycare, Hackman said. Thats what were working to change.ÂÂÂ
The state has guidelines as to what medical conditions warrant exclusion from a daycare setting and which ones do not. But because each daycare center is allowed to have its own exclusion policy, the rules may vary from one center to another. Hackman says shes always willing to write a note to daycare providers when a childs illness is neither contagious nor serious.
Part of the Get Smart About Antibiotics campaign involves studying the states guidelines for daycare exclusion policies to see if changes are needed. Hackman says surveys will assess the stresses parents encounter with regard to daycare re-admissions as well as knowledge of the states exclusion guidelines among daycare providers and pediatricians.
Additional outreach efforts center on safety issues around antibiotics, including taking the medications as directed and not saving leftover portions for use by other people or during a future illness.
For additional information:
--Learn more about the Get Smart About Antibiotics campaign and safe antibiotics use in the latest edition of Penn State Hersheys Sound Health podcast.
--Visit www.cdc.gov/getsmart.
--Think you know your stuff about antibiotics? Take this quiz: www.cdc.gov/getsmart/resources/quiz.html
The Medical Minute is a weekly health news feature brought to you by Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center. Articles feature the expertise of Penn State Hershey faculty physicians and staff, and are designed to offer timely, relevant health information of interest to a broad audience.