For
immediate release:
September
16, 2003
Contact:
Mark Buxton
Antibiotic
Resistance Education Coordinator
573-751-6062
Antibiotics and colds and flu don’t mix
Antibiotics
are the wrong medicines for colds and flu.
The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) is joining
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in a new campaign to
help build awareness about appropriate antibiotic use as another cold and flu
season approaches.
The
nationwide campaign is called: Get Smart:
Know When Antibiotics Work. The
educational effort’s key message is a basic medical fact: antibiotics do not effectively treat colds,
flu and other viral illnesses.
Antibiotics do not kill viruses, make patients with viral infections
feel better, yield a faster recovery or keep others from getting sick.
CDC
estimates that as much as 50 percent of antibiotics prescribed are unnecessary.
“Antibiotics
are wonderful medicines, but they only kill bacteria,” said Mark Buxton,
antibiotic resistance education coordinator for DHSS. “Antibiotic overuse is ruining antibiotic effectiveness. Many people do not realize that antibiotics
are useless against viruses.”
Widespread
inappropriate use of antibiotics is fueling an increase in drug-resistant
bacteria that threaten widespread drug-resistant illness. Over the last decade, almost every type of
bacteria has become stronger and less responsive to antibiotic treatment when
it is needed. These antibiotic
resistant bacteria can quickly spread, introducing a new strain of infectious
disease that is more difficult to cure and more expensive to treat.
“The good
news is that people can fight antibiotic resistance by taking simple steps,”
said Buxton. “One of the best steps is
not to waste antibiotics on viruses like colds and flu.”
The new Get
Smart: Know When Antibiotics Work Campaign will provide public service
advertisements that add to a long-term statewide effort to combat and track antibiotic
resistance. DHSS has worked with local health departments, private industry,
coalitions and statewide organizations to create and distribute educational
materials and encourage appropriate antibiotic use.
CDC will
officially launch the nationwide campaign September 17 at the Interscience
Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy in Chicago.
#####