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Subject:
From:
Alasana Bah <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 29 Sep 2000 12:23:21 PDT
Content-Type:
text/plain
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Hi,

The next time you have a cold save yourself some
money and a trip to the Doctor and drink a lot of
fluids and have a lot of rest.
OR
Have your spouse cook you a hot and spicy
'PEPPEH SOUP' and with that who needs an
antibiotic.
Just as stated in the study the overuse of antibiotics
can create significant problems in managing infections.
God Bless and Peace and Good Health To All

Alasana Bah

>From: MOMODOU BUHARRY GASSAMA <[log in to unmask]>
>Reply-To: The Gambia and related-issues mailing list
><[log in to unmask]>
>To: [log in to unmask]
>Subject: FWD: Antibiotics and colds
>Date: Fri, 29 Sep 2000 02:25:48 +0200
>
>
>
>Hi!
>     This is forwarded from Musa Ngum's homepage. Get your medical news
>from Musa Ngum's homepage at:
>
>http://w1.853.telia.com/~u85309812/medicnews.htm
>
>
>                              Buharry.
>____________________________________________________________________
>
>July 25, 2000
>Antibiotics and colds:
>Antibiotics are ineffective against the viruses that cause the runny nose,
>cough and other symptoms of the common cold. A new study, however, found
>that nearly half of adults and one-third of parents of children with cold
>symptoms wanted a prescription for antibiotics to manage the symptoms.
>
>Barbara L. Braun, Ph.D., and Jinnet B. Fowles, Ph.D., of HealthSystem
>Minnesota in Minneapolis, investigated the reasons for the requests for
>antibiotics and their use among people who had colds.
>
>The researchers interviewed 249 parents and 256 other adults who had
>contacted primary care clinics seeking relief from cold symptoms.
>
>Although those who asked for antibiotics and those who did not had the same
>symptoms, the adults or parents who requested prescriptions more often
>thought the symptoms were severe or had gone on too long.
>
>Most people in the study correctly responded that colds improved on their
>own. Still, only 43 percent were aware that viruses, not bacteria, cause
>colds, according to the study published in the July issue of the Archives
>of Family Medicine.
>
>"Most of the people who called were seeking reassurance that they didn't
>have something other than a cold," says Dr. Fowles.
>
>The improper use of antibiotics can lead to the development of "superbugs"
>that are resistant to all but the strongest antibiotic measures. According
>to a 1998 report by the Institute of Medicine, up to 50 percent of
>antibiotics are prescribed unnecessarily. Many patients compound the
>problem by not taking their prescribed course of antibiotics, allowing the
>surviving bacteria to thrive.
>
>In a related editorial, Kay Bauman, M.D., of the John A. Burns School of
>Medicine in Mililani, Hawaii, says that the study by Drs. Braun and Fowles
>indicates that patient education could reduce the inappropriate use of
>antibiotics for cold symptoms.
>
>Dr. Bauman suggests that doctors tell their patients that antibiotics
>cannot cure a cold and do nothing to shorten the time that symptoms are
>present. In addition, people should be warned that overuse of antibiotics
>can create significant problems in managing infections that had been easily
>treatable, the editorial says.
>
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