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CareCredit Consumer - August 2023

MDs Often Misdiagnose Cause of Cough, Sore Throat

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NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - When a physician tries to determine whether or not a patient's cough or sore throat is caused by a bacterium or a virus, they're correct only 50% of the time, according to a team of Israeli researchers.

The findings show that a physicians' ability to diagnose such ailments is "low and no more reliable than tossing a coin," say Dr. David Lieberman and colleagues from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Beer-Sheva, Israel.

Their report, published in a recent issue of the British Journal of General Practice, also suggests that it is not uncommon for patients to receive antibiotics unnecessarily, or conversely, that patients who might benefit from antibiotics don't get them. Antibiotics can fight bacteria, but are useless in treating infections caused by a virus.

In the study, the researchers looked at 250 adults over 21 years of age with a fever that had lasted less than a week and either a cough, sore throat, hoarseness or a head cold. A family doctor or emergency department physician interviewed and examined patients before diagnosing the infection as bacterial or viral. Blood was taken from patients at that point, and again 3 to 4 weeks later.

The investigators tested the blood for antibodies to a number of different bacteria and viruses. Because antibodies to infectious agents can persist in the body for years, the researchers diagnosed the illness based on changes in antibody level between the first and second blood test. Such a technique would be inappropriate for diagnosing an illness before treatment.

Lieberman and colleagues found that doctors correctly ruled out bacteria as a cause of infection only 60% of the time and correctly identified bacteria as the cause of symptoms only 50% of the time.

SOURCE: British Journal of General Practice 2001;51;998-1000.

Copyright Reuters Limited 2002.
Rexton Reach - April 2024

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