There is a serious and growing issue of bacteria that is becoming resistant to the strongest antibiotic drugs available. Years of over prescribing antibiotics is suspected as being partly to blame with patients not correctly finishing a course of prescribed antibiotics adding to the problem. Antibiotics are exclusively for pathogenic infections caused by bacteria. They do absolutely nothing to cure or control a viral infection.
Doctors Diagnosing and PrescribingA person may go to the doctor to get some help for the symptoms of a bad cold. The cold is caused by a virus. However, secondary bacteria infections could be present along with the viral infection of the cold virus. A thick yellow nasal discharge may be a bacterial sinus infection. It takes days to get the results back from a culture, so doctors routinely prescribe antibiotics as a prophylactic (just in case) treatment based on what is seen.
Patients, and especially the parents of child patients, began to expect antibiotics to be prescribed every time sickness strikes. Doctors know full well that antibiotics do nothing to kill a viral infection, but they often relent because patients want a pill rather than advice to rest and drink plenty of fluids for the next few days. This continued practice has now given rise to bacteria that is tough to kill.
Patient ErrorAntibiotics work by killing off both good and bad bacteria. Each antibiotic kills certain strains and types of bacteria. Patients generally would begin to feel better before the antibiotic pills were finished. A ten day course of antibiotics may be stopped by a patient feeling better at around day six. The problem is that bacteria in the body that is already slightly resistant to the pills is allowed to live and spread into the environment because the prescription was not finished.
Whenever a doctor advises rest and fluids along with some over-the-counter pain medication to get through a viral infection, do not ask for antibiotics. In fact, ask if there is evidence of a bacterial infection when antibiotics are prescribed. Ask if they are absolutely necessary for treatment. Antibiotic medications can be a real lifesaver when they are needed. However, when it comes to viral infections, they are no help at all.
Antibiotics do nothing to treat a viral infection. However, in some cases a physician thinks a patient needs a bacterial infection treated in order to throw off a viral infection.
Antibiotics are used to treat bacterial infections such as chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis. Antibiotics cannot treat viral infections such as HPV, herpes and HIV.
Herpes is a viral infection. It cannot be cured with flucillin or other antibiotics.
Sometimes doctors will prescribe them to either prevent or treat a secondary infection. Some examples are lung or ear infections that may develop as a result of an initial viral infection.
Antibiotics
antibiotics
So it can be properly treated; for example, if you think someone has a bacterial infection, you would treat that person with antibiotics. If that person actually has a viral infection, they should be receiving anti-virals, not antibiotics. Antibiotics have not affect on viruses.
You can't treat SARS with antibiotics because it is a viral disease.
Antibiotics only kill bacteria, they cannot be used effectively to treat a flu virus infection. Antibiotics don't affect viruses. Sometimes people with the flu develop secondary bacterial infections and then antibiotics may be given to treat or prevent this complication.
There are no antibiotics that are effective against viruses. In fact, they should never be used unless a secondary bacterial infection is present and this is best determined by culturing the drainage, whether it is from the nose, throat, blood, or sputum. Because some Dr.'s have overprescribed antibiotics, many of the common bacteria have developed resistance.
Antibiotics are used to treat bacterial infections by targeting the bacteria's structure or function. However, antibiotics are not effective against viruses because viruses are different from bacteria in structure and how they replicate. This is why antibiotics cannot prevent or treat viral diseases.
No it can not.