Study: Antibiotics may not help patients with viral infection to survive
A new study has shown that antibiotics, which are given to most patients entering hospitals due to an acute viral infection as a preventative measure of general bacterial infection, may not increase the chances of survival. The researchers achieved the effect of the use of antibiotics on survival in more than 2,100 patients in a Norway hospital between 2017 and 2021, and found that giving antibiotics to people with general respiratory infection would probably not reduce the risk of death within 30 days. At the height of the pandemic, antibiotics were prescribed for about 70 % of the corona patients in some countries, which can contribute to the incidence of bacterial infection resistant to antibiotics known as resistance views. Excessive use, president of the researcher team, dr. Magranst Garrepsedaer Court, from the University of Akrchos and Oslo University Hospital in Norway, said: “This new information, which was not published in a medical magazine, indicates a great excessive use of antibiotics.” Excessive use of antibiotics and bad use has helped their microbes to resist many treatments, which scientists see as one of the biggest threats to world health. The research has shown, among other things, that it has a pandemic by making a nose or throat for viral infection such as flu or coffee-19, and those with a confirmed bacterial infection are excluded. This research is expected to be presented in the European Conference on Clinical Riddles and Infectious Diseases in Copenhagen next month. In total, 63% of the 2111 patients received antibiotic patients for respiratory infection while staying in hospital. Generally, 168 patients were killed within 30 days, of which only 22 were not prescribed to them. And healthcare and after calculating factors, including gender, age, severity of the disease and diseases inherent among patients, the researchers found that those who prescribed antibiotics during their stay in hospital would probably die within 30 days compared to patients who did not receive antibiotics. The research team noted that the people who have become more ill, and those who are already suffering from health disorders are the most vulnerable to antibiotics and death. They said that other factors such as smoking could also play a role. Dr. Courtind said that, given the limitations imposed on any study, such as their study, the clinical experience she recently started with her friends is needed to determine whether or not patients enter the hospital entering the hospital. Also read: