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Healthy Skepticism Library item: 2673

Warning: This library includes all items relevant to health product marketing that we are aware of regardless of quality. Often we do not agree with all or part of the contents.

 

Publication type: news

Doctors' children get fewer antibiotics: study
Reuters ( originally in the medical journal 'Pediatrics' ) 2005 Oct 18
http://deaconesshospital.adam.com/content.aspx?productId=16&pid=16&gid=2369

Keywords:
antibiotics


Notes:

Ralph Faggotter’s Comments:
Over-prescribing of antibiotics is a worldwide phenomenon.
Doctors demonstrate their hypocrisy by happily prescribing antibiotics for viral illnesses to the ignorant populus while being much more reluctant to give these drugs to their own children.
Why?
Because antibiotics do not help treat viral illnesses at all( though the public has largely been kept in the dark about this) but they do interfere with the normal development of the immune system, lead to an increased risk of developing allergies, candidal infections, diarrhoea, arthritic reactions, liver and kidney damage, rashes and a host of other problems.
This gap between what the medical profession knows and what it has lead the public to believe ( while government health departments sit on the sidelines and say nothing) is hard to explain in any other terms than that the medical profession has happily put profits before health for the last 60 years.


Full text:

Doctors’ children get fewer antibiotics: study
Tue Oct 18, 2005 8:41 PM BST10
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NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Children of doctors and pharmacists are significantly less likely to be given antibiotics for common colds and viral respiratory infections compared with children in the general population, Taiwanese researchers report in the journal Pediatrics.

Dr. Yiing-Jenq Chou of National Yang Ming University, Taipei and colleagues note that antibiotic resistance might be reduced if parents were better informed about the uselessness of these agents in viral infections. Much of such prescribing has been attributed to being a response to parental demands.

To see if health professionals might be aware of this limitation and thus reduce inappropriate antibiotic prescribing to their own children, the researchers examined data on more than 53,000 visits to hospital outpatient departments or physician clinics. The study involved around 21,000 children with common colds, upper respiratory infections and acute bronchitis.

Comparison of children of physicians, pharmacists, nurses and non-health personnel showed that those of physicians were 50 percent less likely than others to receive an antibiotic prescription. Children of pharmacists were 69 percent less likely to be prescribed these drugs. However, for nurses, the likelihood was similar to that of the general population.

Children of parents in low-income groups were also significantly more likely to receive antibiotics than those with higher incomes.

The findings, say the researchers, “support our hypothesis that better parental education does help to reduce the frequency of injudicious antibiotic prescribing.”

However, they also note that in Taiwan, doctors can dispense drugs themselves or through on-site pharmacists. Such physicians were more than twice as likely to prescribe antibiotics as non-dispensing doctors.

To help rectify the situation, the researchers advocate educational, regulatory and other efforts aimed at more appropriate antibiotic prescribing.

SOURCE: Pediatrics, October 2005.

 

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