Create a free Manufacturing.net account to continue

FDA Urges Consumers to be ‘Smart’ about Antibiotic Use

This year, millions of antibiotics will be prescribed. Antibiotics can be used to treat bacterial infections; however, they are commonly over-prescribed. Patients sometimes ask their health care professional to prescribe antibiotic drugs for viral infections, like the common cold, despite...

FDA Urges Consumers to be ‘Smart’ about Antibiotic Use

For Immediate Release: Nov. 15, 2010
Media Inquiries: Erica Jefferson, 301-796-4988, [email protected]
Consumer Inquiries: 888-INFO-FDA

FDA Urges Consumers to be ‘Smart’ about Antibiotic Use
Agency partners with CDC to kick off Get Smart about Antibiotics Week

This year, millions of antibiotics will be prescribed. Antibiotics can be used to treat bacterial infections; however, they are commonly over-prescribed. Patients sometimes ask their health care professional to prescribe antibiotic drugs for viral infections, like the common cold, despite the fact that they will not work and may lead to potentially harmful side effects. The misuse of antibiotics has contributed to one of the world’s most pressing public health problems today, antibiotic resistance.

Antibiotic resistance occurs when bacteria change in a way that reduces or eliminates the effectiveness of antibiotic drugs.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has teamed up with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other health care professional,  government, academic, international and industry partners to support Get Smart About Antibiotics Week (Nov. 15-21) as part of a joint effort to encourage the appropriate use of antibiotics.

When it comes to proper use, FDA recommends the following: 

  • Don’t skip doses and take your medicine as prescribed. Antibiotics are most effective when taken as prescribed.
  • Don’t save antibiotics. The drug is meant for a particular infection at that time. Don’t use leftover medicine. Taking the wrong drug can delay the appropriate treatment and your infection might get worse.
  • Don’t take antibiotics prescribed for others. Only a health care professional can determine the right treatment for your infection.

"Helping the public understand the implications of inappropriate antibiotic use is an important step in slowing the spread of resistance to antibiotic drugs,” said Edward Cox, M.D., M.P.H, director for the Office of Antimicrobial Products in FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “While there are research efforts underway to develop new antibiotics for treating patients with bacterial infections, antibiotic resistance will always be a challenge, and we will always need to use these medicines responsibly.”

By using antibiotic drugs appropriately and carefully, health care professionals and consumers can help limit the spread of antibiotic resistance, so that these drugs are only used to treat people with bacterial infections who need them the most. 

Learn more about Get Smart about Antibiotic Week

For more information:

 

#

 

 

Visit the FDA on Facebook and Flickr

SOURCE

More