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Antibiotic Stewardship: Choosing the Right Drug on the FNP Exam

When I was an FNP student, antibiotics felt impossible. There were too many. Each one had different coverage, different dosing, different side effects, different contraindications. And the boards expected me to pick the right one without hesitation.

I had to find a system. Here's the one I built โ€” the one I still use today, and the one I teach.

Antibiotic selection isn't memorizing 50 drugs. It's matching the bug to the drug, then narrowing by patient.

Step 1: Identify the Most Likely Bug

Every infection has a typical pathogen profile. Memorize these:

Step 2: Pick the First-Line Drug

Uncomplicated UTI in non-pregnant adult

Nitrofurantoin 100 mg BID x 5 days, OR TMP-SMX DS BID x 3 days (if local resistance <20%), OR fosfomycin 3g single dose. Fluoroquinolones are NOT first-line for uncomplicated UTI.

Strep throat

Penicillin V or amoxicillin x 10 days. If penicillin allergic: cephalexin (low cross-reactivity) or azithromycin/clindamycin.

Otitis media (treat if <2 years, bilateral, severe, or persistent)

Amoxicillin 80โ€“90 mg/kg/day x 10 days. If recent antibiotics or failure: amoxicillin-clavulanate.

Community-acquired pneumonia (outpatient, healthy)

Amoxicillin 1g TID OR doxycycline OR a macrolide (azithromycin) if local resistance <25%. If comorbidities: respiratory fluoroquinolone (levofloxacin) OR combination beta-lactam + macrolide.

Skin/soft tissue (non-purulent)

Cephalexin or dicloxacillin. If suspect MRSA (purulent, recent abscess, MRSA history): TMP-SMX, doxycycline, or clindamycin.

Bacterial sinusitis (only if >10 days symptoms or worsening)

Amoxicillin-clavulanate 875/125 mg BID x 5โ€“7 days.

Chlamydia

Doxycycline 100 mg BID x 7 days, OR azithromycin 1g single dose. Treat partners. Consider co-treatment for gonorrhea.

Gonorrhea

Ceftriaxone 500 mg IM single dose. Co-treat chlamydia.

Test Pearl: If a question asks you to "treat empirically," that means before culture results. Pick the drug that covers the most likely organism without overusing broad-spectrum agents.

Step 3: Adjust for the Patient

The Wrong Answers

The FNP boards loves these distractors:

The System

For every infection question on the exam, do this in your head:

  1. Name the bug.
  2. Name the first-line drug.
  3. Check for allergies, pregnancy, age, kidney function.
  4. Pick.

Once this is automatic, antibiotic questions become some of your fastest points.

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