06/01/2026
Give ORAL antibiotics when
1. Patient is clinically stable
β’ Normal or near-normal vitals
β’ No signs of sepsis
β’ No hypotension, no hypoxia
2. GI tract is working
β’ Patient is conscious, cooperative
β’ Can swallow and retain drugs
β’ No persistent vomiting or severe diarrhea
β’ No malabsorption (short gut, severe enteritis)
3. Infection severity is mildβmoderate
β’ Uncomplicated UTI
β’ Mild CAP
β’ Cellulitis without systemic toxicity
β’ ENT infections
πGive IV antibiotics when
1. Patient is sick or unstable
β’ Sepsis / septic shock
β’ Hypotension, tachycardia, hypoxia
β’ Rising lactate, organ dysfunction
2. Altered sensorium
β’ Delirium, coma, encephalopathy
β’ Aspiration risk β oral unsafe
3. Oral route is unreliable
β’ Repeated vomiting
β’ Ileus, severe diarrhea
β’ Malabsorption syndromes
β’ NPO status
4. Infection is severe or life-threatening
β’ Severe pneumonia
β’ Meningitis
β’ Endocarditis
β’ Necrotizing infections
β’ Severe intra-abdominal sepsis
Doctor , medicine , internal medicine , clinical teaching , clinical cases