$Unique_ID{BRK00288} $Pretitle{} $Title{Why Shouldn't One Take Antibiotics Left Over from an Old Prescription?} $Subject{medicine reuse prescription Community Social severe allergic reaction self medication self-prescribed medications dangerous life-threatening reactions medicines} $Volume{Q-23, R-23} $Log{} Copyright (c) 1991-92,1993 Tribune Media Services, Inc. Why Shouldn't One Take Antibiotics Left Over from an Old Prescription? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ QUESTION: Prescription drugs cost a fortune, and I frequently get better sooner than my doctor thought I could. That means I can always save a number of pills if I ever get sick again. Why shouldn't one take antibiotics that are left over from an old prescription? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ANSWER: For many highly important reasons! Taking such antibiotics could cause serious effects including severe allergic reactions. Your first experience with an antibiotic may have just been enough to provoke a reaction when it is taken next, particularly if you only took a small amount the first time. Once you restart a medication on your own, you interfere with managing the illness you are currently experiencing and can complicate your doctor's efforts to diagnose exactly what disease you have now. Among the serious problems doctors face are patients not taking every antibiotic capsule or pill as prescribed. Many patients fail to tell the doctor or admit to this type of "self medication," possibly because they really know better. It really is foolish to stop taking the medicine as soon as you begin to feel better, without giving the medicine the necessary time to complete its job, and take the dosage over a period of time that can completely wipe out the infection. Hoarding medications in the cabinet against a future possible occasion doesn't save money, and puts you in real jeopardy. In a recent study, Illinois researchers found antibiotics in the urine of 17 of 270 patients. Only five of them admitted self-medication. That is dangerous. Not admitting to taking self-prescribed medication could result in doctors administering other medicines that can cause life-threatening reactions. I'm all for saving money, so ask your doctor to prescribe just the quantity of medicine you need for this illness (he probably is doing this anyway) and then take your medicine as directed, knowing that in this way it will do you the most good. It's worth repeating: when your physician prescribes medication for you--particularly antibiotics--TAKE IT ALL. ---------------- The material contained here is "FOR INFORMATION ONLY" and should not replace the counsel and advice of your personal physician. Promptly consulting your doctor is the best path to a quick and successful resolution of any medical problem.