[NPInfo] Antibiotics and sinusitis again
David Mittman
dmittman at comcast.net
Fri Mar 14 08:47:04 PDT 2008
Forgot to paste!
Sinus bug antibiotics 'no good'
Doctors should cut down on antibiotic prescriptions for a common
infection because the drugs do not work, researchers say.
Around 90% of people with sinusitis in the UK are prescribed
antibiotics.
But an analysis of nine trials published in The Lancet shows the
drugs make no difference even if the patient has been ill for more
than seven days.
Sinusitis is very common - often occurring after colds or flu - with
1-5% of adults diagnosed every year.
The infection of the sinuses - small air pockets inside the
cheekbones and forehead - causes a high temperature, pain and
tenderness in the face and forehead, and a blocked or runny nose.
Antibiotics really don't look as if they work
Dr Ian Williamson
Several guidelines advise doctors to prescribe antibiotics only when
the patient has been ill for seven to 10 days.
It has been thought that this length of illness may indicate a
bacterial rather than viral infection which would be susceptible to
antibiotics.
Not justified
The latest research, which looked at how long 2,600 patients were ill
before they received treatment, found time of illness is not a good
indicator of whether antibiotics will be effective.
Because of side-effects, costs, and the risk of resistance,
antibiotics are not justified even if patients have been ill for
longer than a week, the researchers concluded.
The figures showed 15 patients would need to be treated before one
would be cured with antibiotics.
Study leader, Dr Jim Young, from the Basel Institute for Clinical
Epidemiology in Switzerland, said: "If a patient comes to the GP and
says they have had the complaint for seven to 10 days that's not a
good enough reason for giving them the antibiotic."
He added it would be reasonable for GPs to advise patients to come
back if symptoms got worse or went on for another week.
The National Institute for Clinical and health Excellence (NICE)
published draft guidance this week advising GPs not to prescribe
antibiotics or issue delayed prescriptions which patients can use if
they do not get better.
Co-author, Dr Ian Williamson, a GP in Southampton and researcher at
Southampton University, said sinusitis was a horrible condition and
people expected to get antibiotics from their GP to help them.
"Antibiotics really don't look as if they work.
"We have found that antibiotics aren't effective for sore throats and
ear infections but sinusitis, which is similar, is the one that
people are slightly more die hard about."
Professor Steve Field, chair of the Royal College of GPs, said
doctors had been working hard to reduce antibiotic use for sinusitis
in recent years but there was probably still too many prescribed.
"This gives reassurance to GPs that even if patients have specific
symptoms, it's unlikely antibiotics are going to make a dramatic
difference."
He those suffering from the infection to relieve symptoms with steam,
paracetamol and rest.
"You don't need to see the GP unless you've been ill for a week."
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