Influenza, pharmacies, antibiotics.

Influenza. The pharmacies choose not to “tomp”: antibiotics.

In the flu season, the sound of “cough-cough-cough-cough” sounds in the streets. At that point, a lot of people would run to the pharmacies and try to find some medicine to get the flu out of the big demon. Antibiotics are often remembered, but when pharmacies are antibiotics, be careful and don’t accidentally “plug”!

Influenza, caused by the flu virus, the “super bad guy.” It is often sore, sore and sore and sore and so drowsy, as if the body was beaten in madness by a group of little demons. And antibiotics, as we mentioned earlier, is a “soldier” for bacteria, and there’s nothing we can do about viruses. If you eat antibiotics because of the flu, it’s like fighting ghosts with a sword.

Then why do people think about antibiotics in flu? It’s probably because the symptoms of the flu are so painful, you’re thinking about taking more medicine. But in fact, antibiotics are not only unhelpful in this situation, but may also be “disturbing” in the body. It kills our intestinal prophylactics that help digest and maintain health by mistake, as if in a war it wiped out its friends. In this way, the gastrointestinal function will be affected, and there may be problems of nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, which will add to your already difficult body.

Moreover, if antibiotics are always used unreasonably, the bacteria will become more powerful and become resistant. It’s like a game where a little monster escalates, and when a real bacterial disease happens later, the antibiotics may fail.

However, antibiotics could still be useful if there were special circumstances in the course of the flu. For example, influenza causes bacterial infections, such as mid-ear, sinus or pneumonia. At that point, it was as if the virus had broken the line and the bacteria had taken advantage of it. What makes you think there’s a bacterial infection? If the fever continues, when the cough is thicker and yellow, green, or when the ear hurts and the nose hurts so bad, it may be the bacteria that are sneaking, at which point a doctor is needed to determine whether antibiotics are needed.

When the pharmacies choose, don’t be fooled by the various names of antibiotics. Those long-named antibiotics, such as potassium amosilin kravite, hair crochets, etc., cannot be bought at home. If this is not possible, a Pharmacist must be consulted or a doctor must be visited. The pharmacists, like the Pharmacy’s Navigator, can give you professional advice on what kind of drugs are used to mitigate the symptoms of influenza, such as deflammation pills, which can cool you down, and cough medicine can make you cough a little, not blindly recommend antibiotics.

The flu season goes to pharmacies, bearing in mind that antibiotics are not a “one-size-fits-all key” to treating influenza. Only the right treatment of antibiotics and the rational use of drugs can make it easier to fight the flu and not get even worse by using them. So, next time you go to the drugstore, don’t push your hand to the antibiotics.