Antibiotic misuse
Common forms of antibiotic misuse include taking an antibiotic for an inappropriate condition, in particular the use of antibiotics for viral infections; and not taking the entire course of the antibiotic, usually because the patient feels better before the infection is cured.
There is debate over the appropriateness of including antibiotics in the diet of healthy farm animals. Opponents of this practice point out that it leads to antibiotic resistance, including in bacteria that infect humans. The practice continues in many places, however, because feeding livestock antibiotics promotes weight gain, and thus makes economic sense for the individual farm or ranch.
Antibiotic resistance
One side effect of misusing antibiotics is the development of antibiotic resistance by bacteria. By 1984 half the people with active tuberculosis in the United States had a strain that resisted at least one antibiotic. Between 1985 and 1991 tuberculosis increased 12 per cent in the US and 300 per cent in Africa where HIV and TB are often found together.