The prognosis of osteoarticular infections has improved over the past 20years but it still remains potentially severe. The treatment of these infections has been simplified and shortened. In 2008, the Pediatric Infectious Disease Group (GPIP) established new therapeutic guidelines in order to standardize treatment in France. The aim of this study is to analyze practices in a Parisian hospital and assess the efficacy of this treatment in short and medium terms. This retrospective study focused on patients older than 3months, without comorbidities, who were hospitalized for an acute osteoarticular infection in 2012at Trousseau Hospital (Paris), with a follow-up of at least 4weeks. The patients were selected from the hospital register. The study included 64patients of 156, who were admitted for examination with a diagnosis of acute osteoarticular infection, bacteriologically confirmed (29/64) or presumed on the basis of bacteriological evidence (35/64). The median age of the patients was 22months. Of the patients, 78% were febrile; 35patients had arthritis (54.7%), 21osteomyelitis (32.8%), seven osteoarthritis (10.9%), and one spondylitis. Preferential localizations were the knees and hips; 61% of arthritis cases were diagnosed with ultrasound, 54% of osteomyelitis cases with scintigraphy. The two main microorganisms found were Kingella kingae (62.1%) and Staphylococcusaureus (24.1%). In 98% of cases, patients were treated by cefamandole, with or without gentamicine, for a median duration of 3days (1-10) intravenously, with oral relay by amoxicillin-clavulanic acid, for a total duration of 6weeks, but in association with rifampicin in 40% of cases without explanation. The median follow-up was 13weeks, with a treatment success rate of 86%. The study of local practices showed us that the GPIP guidelines are not followed, with the duration of oral treatment being too long. The trend in therapy is toward short treatments of 10-20days, with a shorter intravenous phase.