Use of antibiotics in maternal and child health-care institutions: precautionary approach
In maternal and child health care centres, the use of antibiotics is a matter of considerable caution. After all, most of the patients here are mothers-to-be, new mothers and lovely babies, who are safe to use.
Let’s start with Mom. The pregnancy is a special period, and the mothers are like precious porcelain dolls, with little life in them. If they get sick, they’ll have a lot of brains, and they won’t have to take it out easily. Because some antibiotics can be like naughty little demons, sneaking through the placenta, affecting the development of the baby in the stomach. Can you imagine? It’s terrible that the baby would have grown up in a warm uterus and suddenly had an impassioned antibiotic that might have interfered with the formation of the baby’s organs. Thus, doctors usually begin with mild treatments, such as drinking water, resting, physical cooling and heat. Only when the condition is severe, such as severe pneumonia, and the absence of antibiotics may endanger the lives of mothers and babies, after balancing the pros and cons, carefully select the antibiotics that have the least impact on the foetus, like the softest one in a bunch of thorny roses.
New mothers have just experienced a great war of childbirth and are still weak. At this point, doctors will be careful to choose if the use of antibiotics is required because of, for example, post-partum infections. Since new mothers may still be breastfeeding, antibiotics can cause adverse effects such as diarrhoea, rashes, etc. if they reach the baby through milk. Doctors, like smart detectives, take into account the new mother’s condition, the type of antibiotics and breastfeeding. If antibiotics were to be used, every effort would be made to provide the drug after the baby has had milk, so that the drug is relatively low in milk and the impact on the baby can be reduced. And we’ll keep an eye on how the baby reacts like the guardian of the little angel.
And look at the lovely babies. The baby’s body is like a flower, and the immune system is not perfect. When the baby is sick, parents are often anxious to have the baby cured with the strongest possible medication. But doctors can’t be so impulsive. Common colds, coughs, mostly caused by viruses, and antibiotics are no good for viruses, like punching air with fists and wasting effort. At this point, the doctor will patiently tell parents that the baby will be able to drink more water and rest and recover slowly on its own immunity. The use of antibiotics is considered only if it is clearly a bacterial infection, such as bacterial pneumonia, mesopitis, etc. It also accurately calculates the use of antibiotics based on the weight, age, etc. of the baby, ensuring that the disease is killed without placing too much burden on the baby ‘ s body.
In maternal and child health centres, the use of antibiotics is like a well-planned battle. Doctors must fight the disease while protecting the health of mothers, new mothers and babies. This requires doctors to be knowledgeable, sensitive and highly responsible. There is also a need for understanding and cooperation among mothers, new mothers and parents. Don’t ask for antibiotics as soon as the baby is sick, and trust the doctor’s professional judgment. After all, the goal is the same for every small life to grow healthy and for every mother to be able to live with the baby’s path. As a result, the use of antibiotics is common in mother and child health-care institutions, but every time they are used with care and care only to protect the precious health of the mother and child.