Clinical Bacteria Type by Region Foam Board education infographic for medical offices
Designed by a Retired U.S. Army Medic and practicing PA — built for real exam rooms, not waiting room filler.
This clinical foam board maps the most common bacteria by body region — respiratory, urinary, skin, GI, and more — giving providers and patients a clear visual reference for understanding infection patterns and why targeted treatment matters.
One of the most common questions in primary care is “Why am I getting this antibiotic?” This foam board answers that before you even walk in the room. When patients can see which bacteria typically cause infections in different parts of the body, the clinical reasoning behind treatment decisions becomes intuitive rather than mysterious.
Created by a Retired U.S. Army Medic and Physician Assistant in Family Medicine, this series was designed after years of explaining the same concepts over and over — and realizing visuals work better than words alone.
Designed for real clinical use, this foam board helps providers:
• Explain common bacterial pathogens by body region in plain language
• Support antibiotic stewardship and targeted treatment conversations
• Serve as a quick visual reference for residents and students
• Create a more professional and educational exam room environment
Perfect For:
• Primary care and family medicine clinics
• Urgent care and emergency medicine
• Nurse practitioners & physician assistants
• Physicians, residents, and medical students
• Infectious disease and hospital medicine practices
After years of explaining why a UTI gets a different antibiotic than a skin infection — I wanted a visual that made the logic visible at a glance.
Need 5 or more for your clinic or hospital? Contact us for bulk/clinic pricing — we work directly with practices, hospitals, and medical offices.
Product features
- Lightweight 0.19″ foam board — easy to mount anywhere in your clinic
- 16″ x 20″ format with vibrant, crisp print quality
- Rigid and durable — no frame required
- Wipe-clean surface for easy maintenance in clinical environments
Care instructions
- Wipe gently with a clean, slightly damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners.