An antibiogram is a laboratory procedure in which samples of a bacterium are treated with a variety of antibiotics.
SARAH WOODWORTH has written: 'DEVELOPMENT OF A CENTRE SPECIFIC ANTIBIOGRAM FOR PERITONEAL DIALYSIS-RELATED PERITONITIS'
You can't test it on human, but you can make a bacterial culture in a petri dish and put some sponge disk that contains different antibiotics and see which one works the best. There is other techniques but all you get is an "antibiogram" that gives you a list of antibiotic with the effectiveness for the specific bacteria.
It is recommended a lab test to verify the appropriate antibiotic you are needing. This test is called an antibiogram.
For determining the type of causal agent of infectious diseases and for checking their sensitivity to antibiotics and chemotherapeutic agents in vitro by means of the inhibition zone determination method. The antibiogram allows rational and selective chemotherapy. The test discs can be coated with chemotherapeutic agents, placed on the innoculated nutrient agar and incubated. The size of the inhibition zone is a measure for the effectiveness of the substances.