Antibiotics are powerful medicines against bacterial infections—but they don’t work on viruses. Many common colds, flus and mild throat infections are viral, and antibiotics don’t make them go away faster.
Unnecessary antibiotic use can cause side effects (loose motions, rashes, yeast infections) and contributes to antibiotic resistance—where bacteria learn to outsmart the medicines. That’s a global problem.
You generally need antibiotics when your doctor suspects or confirms a bacterial infection—like some pneumonias, certain ear infections, urinary infections, skin infections, or complications of earlier illnesses. The decision is based on symptoms, exam findings and sometimes tests.
If your doctor says, “Right now it looks viral; let’s watch and treat symptoms,” that’s not neglect—that’s responsible practice.
Never take leftover antibiotics from old strips, or someone else’s prescription, or stop midway “because I feel better now.” Courses should be finished as directed, unless your doctor tells you to stop due to side effects.
When in doubt, ask: “Is this definitely bacterial? What happens if I wait a bit? What side effects should I watch for?” Clear communication keeps antibiotics available and effective for when we actually need them.
