I on the other hand cannot remember exactly when I last managed to pry any antibiotics from a doctor...I think it has been more than 10 years, despite having had three infections since which once upon a time would have been treated with such meds. I don't know who it is who has over prescribed, or where, but it wasn't any of the 11 or 12 doctors, spread over four practices in four towns in three parts of the country, that I have encountered in the last 22 years. Maybe in places where the doctors are not primarily gate keepers with a mission to prevent excess expenditure of government funds
on hypochondriacs, the prescription situation is different. Here, you have to feel like death to get an appointment, which will only be available a week or two in the future (so anything really bad will have killed you already), then you may get referred to the nurse to draw blood, but that will probably be another day, that needs a separate appointment, then you will go home and carry on dying for a week until you get a message that your results are in, after which you can make a further appointment to discuss your results, cue a further few days or week, then you get to see a different doctor who has absolutely no idea why you came in in the first place, who taps away on a computer and asks what you would like to know about your test results! Of course, by now you have either got over whatever it was (see, you didn't need treatment!), it has become chronic, or killed you. Two out of three chances that you won't cost the Health Service any money.
Given that the above is the situation, it seems reasonable to go in with the aim to get treatment at all costs, because it will be a long battle any way, and if you don't fight, you will simply be turned away. No chance of convincing someone that flu symptoms are reason for antibiotics if you are polite and very British about it.