Most children shouldn’t be given penicillin for sore throats
When kids have sore throats, they are
often given a prescription for penicillin, one of the most widely used
antibiotics. However, according to a study in the BMJ (formerly the
British Medical Journal), that’s the wrong thing to do. Not only does
it rarely help relieve symptoms, but it can put the children at risk for
serious side effects and may cause an increase in antibiotic resistance.
Dutch researchers identified 156
children aged 4-15 who visited their family doctor with a severe sore
throat. The children were randomly assigned to penicillin for seven days,
penicillin for three days followed by placebo for four days, or placebo for
seven days.
Penicillin did not reduce the duration
of symptoms, nor did it affect school attendance or recurrences of sore
throat. The authors recommended that medical doctors should use penicillin
to treat children with an acute sore throat only when they are severely ill
or are at high risk of developing serious complications.
SOURCE:
“Penicillin for acute sore throat in children: randomised, double blind
trial,” by Dr. Sjoerd Zwart, et. al., BMJ, December 6, 2003.