DP here. Smugness? This is more of a conversation about how they’re prescribed. I don’t think it has much to do with parents. |
| You so smug |
This. I remember having penicillin pretty frequently as a kid, but between two teens, I only gave them once to a toddler for pink eye. I find it kind of interesting. |
| My 12 year old hasn’t needed them yet but her gut is not the best. |
My experience also. I had quite a lot of antibiotics as a child. Possibly in liquid form. My older kid graduated from high school with only having antibiotics once. Infant pinkeye/crusty eye. My younger kid didn't have any until high school when he developed ear infections due to allergies impacting sinus drainage. Each time he had to get refills or stronger stuff so maybe 4-5 times. My kids went to daycare starting at 6 months. |
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My kids are 1, 4, and 6, and I think only once to the six year old (eye infection). That's the only time I can remember but it's possible I'm forgetting one.
I will say though - some kids get a lot of ear infections and need a lot of antibiotics. That's fine, really. If that's you, cross this off your list of things to worry about. |
You don’t get to avoid antibiotics. If you have a bacterial infection you need an antibiotic. Before antibiotics children died from bacterial pneumonia and bacterial strep throat and other common illnesses. Pertussis, if you’re too dumb to get vaccinated, is very contagious and can only be cured with antibiotics. |
Yes I guess they are screwed. |
I always got them as suppositories, which I'm glad we avoided as parents. |
| My oldest kid had strep a bunch of times in a row in PK4, and once strep and pneumonia simultaneously. We're not popping augmentin like it's Tic Tacs but I don't know how people are saying they've made it through their kids' entire childhoods without ever having an antibiotic. |
No, doctors have known for years not to overprescribe antibiotics. I know this because my spouse is a doctor in a family of doctors. This is not a prescription problem, it's just a medical truth that some patients tend to have more infections than others, through no fault of their own. For ear infections, for ex, it may have to do with the shape of the ear canal. So OP is judging a set of humans (doctors, parents, whoever) for something that is not under human control. Stop it. |
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My kid was bitten by a spider that turned into cellulitis for which he was hospitalized on IV antibiotics and then on oral ones for several days after that. His gut was messed up from the ab but we gave him probiotics and lots of yogurt which turned that around.
He's also been on ab for strep a few times in his life. |
| Yeah, I think overprescribing is generally a thing of the past - our childhoods, moreso than our kids'. If my kid is getting prescribed an antibiotic, it's really only for something that needs an antibiotic (like strep) to avoid progressing to something worse. |
Similar. Kids are 19 and 16. Lots of ear infections, strep throat, etc. from infancy through elementary. Oldest had ear tubes at 18 months then tonsillectomy/ adenoidectomy at 2.5. He then became a non- symptomatic strep throat carrier and spread it to rest of family multiple times before we got a new pediatrician who would put all of us on antibiotics at the same time when one of us had strep. Suspected PANDAS in youngest so he was on antibiotics for several months in elementary school. For most typical antibiotics, the gut mostly recovers in 2-8 weeks. There are certain antibiotics that have a longer term impact on gut health - like clindamycin, fluoroquinolones, flucloxacillin… Although studies show there is a difference in gut biome between those that have taken antibiotics and those that haven’t, there’s no data on what that actually means for over healthy and lifespan. |
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12 year old had it once --for pneumonia, and it helped him within 12 hours.
9 year old never yet. |