Baby Antibiotics Travelers Rest SC

Conventional wisdom tells us that babies and germs make a bad mix. Since children's immune systems generally aren’t fully functional until their second birthday, diligent moms and dads pay special attention to cleanliness and proper sanitation. And when babies come down with bugs, well-intentioned pediatricians often prescribe broad'spectrum antibiotics.

Dr. Frederick F Chisholm Jr
215-361-5040
807 N Main St
Travelers Rest, SC
Dr. Addie Stark Hunnicutt
517-483-2700
Greenville, SC
Graeme H Johnson, MD
864-455-7879
206 Galphin Dr
Greenville, SC
Alan Randall Anderson, MD
864-244-9020
3110 Wade Hampton Blvd
Taylors, SC
Schultz Carolyn G MD
864-292-8868
4501 Old Spartanburg Road
Taylors, SC
Frederick F Chisholm Jr, MD
807 N Main St
Travelers Rest, SC
Addie Stark Hunnicutt, MD
Greenville, SC
Carolyn Gardner Schultz, MD
4501 Old Spartanburg Rd
Taylors, SC
Tabitha Randol
(864) 292-8868
4501 Old Spartanburg Rd
Taylors, SC
Dr. Alan Randall Anderson
864-244-9020
3110 Wade Hampton Blvd
Taylors, SC
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Babies, Antibiotics, and Asthma

By Kris Kucera

Conventional wisdom tells us that babies and germs make a bad mix. Since children’s immune systems generally aren’t fully functional until their second birthday, diligent moms and dads pay special attention to cleanliness and proper sanitation. And when babies come down with bugs, well-intentioned pediatricians often prescribe broad-spectrum antibiotics. Unfortunately, giving antibiotics to infants—even just one course—in their first year of life may double their susceptibility to asthma, compared to antibiotic-free babies, according to researchers from the University of British Columbia, along with BC’s Centre for Disease Control and Centre for Clinical Epidemiology and Evaluation. Scrutinizing eight studies, which surveyed more than 12,000 children, the researchers’ data indirectly support the hygiene hypothesis—the idea that in developed countries, kids’ reduced exposure to germs may actually impede their immune responses. Critics argue that although pediatric exposure to germs is essential, certain bacterial infections necessitate antibiotic treatment as a safety measure. Also, they point out, the hygiene hypothesis fails in inner cities, where asthma rates in underprivileged youths have soared, even though most of these kids live amid substandard levels of hygiene. With the jury still out, concerned parents should ask their pediatricians for blood work before they agree to medicate their infants, preventing needless antibiotic treatments for viral infections or illnesses with undetermined causes.

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