Abstract
Antibiotics with small but definable mortality, such as chloramphenicol, should not be used when safer drugs will suffice. Antibiotics with a low (1 to 5 per cent) morbidity should not be used when safer drugs are available. Therefore, cleocin, minocycline, or oral erythromycin estolate should rarely be used and regular erythromycin base is almost always preferable. Fever should not be treated with antibiotics since they are not antipyretics. "Colds" should not be treated with antibiotics, but antibiotics should be administered to patients with a history of chronic bronchitis, sinusitis, and recurrent otitis as soon as any symptoms begin. Intramuscular antibiotics should not be given except for benzathine penicillin. Use placebos instead of antibiotics when the patient's psyche demands an intramuscular injection. Make certain that the needle, syringe, and solution are sterile. Agents other than penicillin or cephalosporins should be used in patients with a definite history of penicillin allergy. Combination antibiotics or broad spectrum antibiotics like cephelosporins or tetracyclines should not be used when narrow spectrum antibiotics of known efficacy are available for specific syndromes such as streptococcal pharyngitis.
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