Do not give too much antibiotics to your children, how they are affected

Antibiotics are important drugs, but their overuse leads to a large number of health threats. According to one new study, the use of antibiotics more than it should lead to another weight - increasing problem. Researchers from “Johns Hopkins Bloomberg” have found that children who regularly use antibiotics during childhood [...]
According to one new study, the use of antibiotics more than it should lead to another weight - increasing problem.
Researchers from “Johns Hopkins Bloomberg” have found that children who regularly use antibiotics during their childhood gain weight faster than those who do not, reports the “International Journal of Obsity”, following Eye.net.
Dr. Brian Schwartz, professor at school “Bloomberg” and his team have analyzed the data from more than 160 thousand children between the ages of 3 and 18. They have collected weight and weight data to establish the thickness index as well as the use of antibiotics by comparison year after year
The results showed that at the age of 15, children who had received antibiotics seven or more times during their childhood weighed five pounds [1.5 kg] more than those who never received antibiotics. Some 21 % of the participants, 30,000, have received seven or more antibiotics during childhood.
Swartz says these findings imply that obesity results from the use of antibiotics, and it changes depending on how strong antibiotics are.
Scientists had announced this earlier based on animal testing.
The reason for this, researchers say, is that antibiotics influence certain microorganisms that live in the human body.
In the end, scientists say that this does not mean that antibiotics are not used but that grassmakers should be more accurate in describing the drug they create.












