>Antibiotics were routinely used for illnesses where they shouldn't have been - ear infections, viral coughs and colds.
In developing nations people often use antibiotics in the worst way - a short course until they feel better, not a long course until the bacteria are all killed. This is partly because they don't know any better and partly because they buy what they can afford.
On the contrary, I would like to point out that its not limited to developing nations. When I first arrived in the US, one of the advice that my US settled relatives gave me was that American doctors routinely prescribe antibiotics even for the simplest illness. This fact was confirmed when I took my Mum to a doctor when she felt unwell when visiting me: light fever, and the prescription was some very potent antibiotics. My mother refused to take them and got better on her own after a few days. There seems to be a reluctance to take antibiotics in my family.
In developing nations people often use antibiotics in the worst way - a short course until they feel better, not a long course until the bacteria are all killed. This is partly because they don't know any better and partly because they buy what they can afford.
On the contrary, I would like to point out that its not limited to developing nations. When I first arrived in the US, one of the advice that my US settled relatives gave me was that American doctors routinely prescribe antibiotics even for the simplest illness. This fact was confirmed when I took my Mum to a doctor when she felt unwell when visiting me: light fever, and the prescription was some very potent antibiotics. My mother refused to take them and got better on her own after a few days. There seems to be a reluctance to take antibiotics in my family.