“…A practical approach towards use of cultures was also found in Canadian studies, where GPs usually prescribed antibacterials for sore throat before getting results of a culture and when limited access to laboratories could play a role [20,21]. Our informants' uncertainty about their clinical observations, laboratory tests and scientifically proven facts agrees with research indicating that diagnoses in general practice often are less certain than in hospitals, and sometimes based more on signs and symptoms than tests [22,23]. Microbiological diagnosis for infections in the community is rarely available at the time of prescribing, often not at all and the aetiology is variable, even mixed [4,24], which underlines GPs need for user-friendly, up-todate information on susceptibility trends [24].…”