Antibiotics Should Only Be Used For Bacterial  Infections.  Prescribing antibiotics to treat respiratory tract  infections has dropped significantly in recent years, a new study has  found.
That's mainly the result of fewer young  children being seen for ear infections, according to the researchers.  But despite a decline overall, prescriptions for broad-spectrum  antibiotics, such as azithromycin (Zithromax), and anti-microbial agents  known as quinolones have increased, they reported. Such drugs are used  to fight more serious infections, such as MRSA and other resistant  bacteria.
"There is good news about declining  antibiotic use, since inappropriate use of antibiotics can result in  bacteria that are resistant to these antibiotics," said Dr. Marie R.  Griffin, a professor of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University  Medical Center and a co-author of the study. "However, overuse of  powerful antibiotics remains a problem."
"Antibiotics  should only be used for bacterial infections, and heavy-duty antibiotics  should be saved for serious infections," Griffin said.
Over the  last 12 years, she said, use of antibiotics in children has declined 36  percent. "This is mainly due to educational efforts to reduce  inappropriate use of antibiotics for viral infections and to a new  vaccine -- pneumococcal conjugate vaccine for infants, which has reduced  ear infections in children," she said.
For the  study, which is published in the Aug. 19 issue of the Journal of the  American Medical Association, the researchers looked at the trends in  prescriptions for antibiotics from 1995 to 2006, using data from the  National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey and the National Hospital  Ambulatory Medical Care Survey.
They found  that medical visits for ear infections among children younger than 5  declined 17 percent in that time, and antibiotic prescription rates  dropped 27 percent.
The study attributed the decrease to a 36  percent reduction in antibiotic prescriptions for respiratory tract  infections. Rate of doctor visits for ear infections fell 33 percent  over the study period, and rates of antibiotic prescriptions  specifically for ear infections fell 36 percent, the researchers found.
Among those 5  and older, doctor visits for respiratory tract infections remained  about the same, but antibiotic prescription rates for those infections  dropped18 percent. Prescription rates for antibiotics for other  conditions for which antibiotics are rarely indicated dropped 24 percent  in this age group, the study found.
In the past  decade, initiatives in the United States have urged the judicious use of  antibiotics, particularly for acute respiratory tract infection, which  is a common reason for people to see a doctor and a frequent reason for  antibiotic prescriptions, especially for young children, the researchers  noted.
The use and misuse of antibiotics can  increase the likelihood that bacteria will become resistant to  antibiotics. Infections caused by antibiotic-resistant microorganisms  have been associated with increased illness, death and substantial  costs, the researchers said.
Dr. Stuart B.  Levy, president of the Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antibiotics and a  professor of medicine, molecular biology and microbiology at Tufts  University School of Medicine, said he thinks the trend toward less  antibiotic use is encouraging.
"It's a  wonderful finding," Levy said. "The message is getting out there. There  is a major thrust in the appropriate use of antibiotics -- the  realization that if we reduce the use of antibiotics, we will reduce the  levels of resistance."
Levy added that it also has  become easier for doctors to tell patients they don't need antibiotics.
"Now  patients are saying: 'If I don't need the antibiotic, why should I take  it?' That is a good sign," he said.
People are  getting the message that "antibiotics are not cure-alls, and a  consequence of antibiotic usage and misuse is the resistance that  emerges," Levy said. ( HealthDay News)
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