This is a question that continues to stimulate vigorous debate among doctors, especially as concern about antibiotic resistance has grown in the past few years.
In general, I prescribe antibiotics to children when I have good clinical suspicion that their symptoms are caused by an infectious bacterium. Cases of middle ear infections (otitis media), sinusitis (sinus infection), pharyngitis (sore throat), and bronchitis or pneumonia, when accompanied by high fevers are usually good times to prescribe antibiotics. These are basically good rules of thumb when treating adults as well.
There are those, of course, on the extremes of the issue, who will either prescribe antibiotics indiscriminately for all illnesses, or will abstain from their use in almost every case, but I think that these doctors are becoming rare animals.
Only licensed professionals can prescribe medications. The doctor wanted to prescribe an anti-depressant.
No. They require investigation by a doctor who might then prescribe antibiotics if appropriate.
The doctor may prescribe antibiotics to reduce the risk of infection. If the patient can breathe without a ventilator, the room is humidified
The doctor will prescribe a antibiotic for that.
what antibiotics will a doctor normally prescribe you for cevicitis ?
heck no!
the crappy kind.
It requires a doctor's examination and if determined to be a bacterial infection, the doctor will prescribe medications (antibiotics) if there is puss found.
A chest x ray is often taken, especially in children, to check whether the tube has become displaced or if complications have occurred. The doctor may prescribe antibiotics to reduce the risk of infection. If the patient can breathe.
a doctor may prescribe a more powerful anti-diarrheal drug, such as motofen or lomotil. If pathogenic bacteria or parasites are found in the patient's stool sample, medications such as antibiotics will be prescribed.
NO! poliomyelitis is caused by a virus (poliovirus). antibiotics are only effective against bacteria. *A doctor may prescribe antibiotics as supportive care but the antibiotics are not treating the polio directly.
It requires a doctor's examination and if determined to be a bacterial infection, the doctor will prescribe medications (antibiotics) if there is puss found.