Oasis Discussions

How justified are dentists in using antibiotics? A review

This summary is based on the article published in the International Dental Journal: Antibiotics in dental practice: how justified are we (February 2015)

Sukhvinder S. Oberoi, Chandan Dhingra, Gaurav Sharma, Divesh Sardana

Courtesy of Wiley Publishing, you can access the full-text article for the next 3 months here (PDF)

Context

Purpose of the Review

This paper highlights the need for dentists to improve antibiotic prescribing practices in an attempt to curb the increasing incidence of antibiotic resistance and other side effects of antibiotic abuse. The literature provides evidence of inadequate prescribing practices by dentists for a number of factors, ranging from inadequate knowledge to social factors.

Key Messages

 

2 Comments

  1. Bell March 22, 2015

    More often than not we encounter patients who have prescriptions from their physicians or from walk-in clinics for tooth aches without any justification i.e., marked swelling, redness, fever, or any systemic symptoms that justify these prescriptions.

    Reply
  2. Mike Christensen March 24, 2015

    It seems just about every patient has his own supply of “penicillin”. Often we hear the patient say he knew he had an abscess but only had 5 pills or whatever. So he took one every day or two from his supply from last time someone prescribed to him and he didn’t finish the prescription so two days of penicillin would last a week. Now if this doesn’t cause antibiotic resistance, I don’t know what could. I think this article takes aim at dentists but really doesn’t give enough specific information for the reader to be able to discern whether the allegation is correct.

    Reply

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