NHS patients ‘should stop nagging GPs for antibiotics’ as overuse is blamed for 5,000 superbug deaths a year
Public Health England have advised Brits to try staying in bed when feeling under the weather with coughs, colds and sore throats
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PEOPLE should stop badgering GPs for antibiotics as over-use is causing 5,000 superbug deaths a year, officials say.
Those feeling under the weather should stay in bed, Public Health England advises.
The Chief Medical Officer, Professor Dame Sally Davies, is backing a new campaign to discourage adults with coughs, colds and sore throats rushing to ask for antibiotics.
It will be launched today, accompanied by a TV ad featuring a gloomy gang of singing pills.
Experts say swift action is needed to stave off a “post-antibiotic apocalypse”.
Dame Sally has warned drug-resistant bugs pose a “catastrophic threat”. Experts say sick Brits should opt for paracetamol, rest, plenty of fluids and regular handwashing unless they suspect a serious illness.
Only then should they see a GP. Officials also say needless use of antibiotics triples the risk of adults getting a deadly superbug.
Kids are also 12 times more likely to get a drug- resistant infection in future.
Around 16,000 cases of vomiting bug e.coli – four in 10 infections – were resistant to the most common antibiotics last year.
Health Minister Steve Brine said: “We are asking people to help so we can make sure antibiotics keep working.”