It can be hard to tell if you need an antibiotic.Think antibiotics are a quick fix for a stuffy nose, cough, and sore throat? You're not alone. Tom Campbell, MD, a family physician from Rochester, N.Y., says that patients often plead for antibiotics for garden-variety cold symptoms, saying everything from "The last time it helped me completely" to "I have to go to my daughter's wedding" and "There's this terrible green guck coming out of my nose." There's just one problem. While antibiotics are excellent at killing bacteria (as long as you match the right drug to the right germ), they're useless at killing viruses. And viruses, including the flu, cause 90% of respiratory infections. "Most upper respiratory infections are caused by viruses; a minority are caused by bacteria," says Lauri Hicks, MD, medical director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's "Get Smart: Know When Antibiotics Work" program. For example, Dr. Hicks notes, only 2% of sinus infections are caused by bacteria and require an antibiotic.
So what, you say? Antibiotics might help and they certainly can't hurt, right? Wrong. The evidence is piling up that using antibiotics indiscriminately is dangerous from a public health standpoint (it can breed drug-resistant bacteria) and even personally (they kill off healthy bacteria in your body and may let toxic germs gain a foothold).
However, there are times when the icky green goo in your nose or the hideous rattling cough in your chest might benefit from the antibiotic superhero treatment. So how do you know if you need one?
Get the latest health, fitness, anti-aging, and nutrition news, plus insights and updates from Health.com!











SweepstakesHealth
Credit: Colette De Barros









FREE Healthy Living Email
Advertisement
SweepstakesHealth NewsettersSubscribeHealthy & HappyNews & ViewsSex & RelationshipsHome & FamilyMind & BodyDiet & FitnessCardio WorkoutsLose WeightGet StrongerYoga & PilatesFood & RecipesRecipesMust-Eat FoodsCelebrity ChefsMyths & FactsBeauty & StyleSkin & Anti-AgingHair & MakeupSlimming StyleCelebrity TipsHealth A-ZAdult ADHDAlzheimer's DiseaseAsthmaBipolar DisorderBirth ControlBreast CancerChildhood VaccinesCholesterolChronic PainCold, Flu, and SinusCOPDCrohn's DiseaseDepressionDiabetes (Type 2)FibromyalgiaGERDHeadaches & MigrainesIncontinenceMenopauseMultiple SclerosisOsteoarthritisOsteoporosisPsoriasisRheumatoid ArthritisSexual HealthSleep DisordersMore ConditionsMagazineCurrent IssueSubscribeTablet EditionArchiveGive a Gift SubscriptionCustomer ServiceMedia KitFood for Better MoodsHome >> Healthy & Happy >> Home & Family >> 5 Fast, Fresh, and Fabulous Meals5 Fast, Fresh, and Fabulous Meals From slow-cooker chicken to chickpea patties, here are great go-to recipes for family dinner.
Credit: Hallie Burton




FREE Healthy Living Email Newsletter
SweepstakesHealth NewsettersSubscribeHealthy & HappyNews & ViewsSex & RelationshipsHome & FamilyMind & BodyDiet & FitnessCardio WorkoutsLose WeightGet StrongerYoga & PilatesFood & RecipesRecipesMust-Eat FoodsCelebrity ChefsMyths & FactsBeauty & StyleSkin & Anti-AgingHair & MakeupSlimming StyleCelebrity TipsHealth A-ZAdult ADHDAlzheimer's DiseaseAsthmaBipolar DisorderBirth ControlBreast CancerChildhood VaccinesCholesterolChronic PainCold, Flu, and SinusCOPDCrohn's DiseaseDepressionDiabetes (Type 2)FibromyalgiaGERDHeadaches & MigrainesIncontinenceMenopauseMultiple SclerosisOsteoarthritisOsteoporosisPsoriasisRheumatoid ArthritisSexual HealthSleep DisordersMore ConditionsMagazineCurrent IssueSubscribeTablet EditionArchiveGive a Gift SubscriptionCustomer ServiceMedia KitFood for Better MoodsHome >> Healthy & Happy >> Home & Family >> 4 Easy Recipes That Use Rotisserie Chicken4 Easy Recipes That Use Rotisserie Chicken Get dinner on the table in no time with these simple recipes that use rotisserie chicken.




FREE Healthy Living Email Newsletter
