Germs, Super Germs and Antibiotic Resistance

in health •  7 years ago 

If you have gone to the doctor for a stomach virus or cold in the last few years, you might realize like I have that it can be very hard to get antibiotics. As a whole many of the doctors are recommending them far less often. This is because on a large scale the doctors are trying to avoid, or at least slow down the process of germ evolution to resist certain strands of antibiotics. The main problem is these new antibiotic resistant germs, dubbed Super Germs, are growing resistant to antibiotics, far faster than we can actually create new antibiotics to fight them. If this continues, we could have mass outbreaks in the future that might kill many, that essentially could have been saved if we were more selective with who we distribute antibiotics to.

In perhaps the most contradictory statement I have ever made, I am going to say that getting sick, is completely healthy. What I really mean by this is having a cold, getting sick and coming into contact with a variety of germs is a natural and in many ways beneficial thing. We may get mildly sick for the moment and feel like crap, but our body learns to adapt and fight our sicknesses in the future. Without any exposure to germs and having your body lack any sort of resistance, puts you at risk for potentially much more severe reactions when you come into contact with other sickness.

If we take the age of example of Polio, which destroyed nerve cells in the spinal cord, while also making muscles weak, causing paralysis, was not a disease that many lower class people were exposed to. In fact the vast majority of people who had gotten Polio in places like the United States, were from upper class families. For the most part, Children from lower class families and areas were exposed to so much bacteria that they built immunities to the Polio virus when there were outbreaks. Those who spent time inside, away and avoiding germs were much better targets for the disease.

This is the large problem we are seeing today, not only from people who are using antibiotics for every little sickness, but also from parents who are choosing to do so for their children. Parents are not letting their kids get down and dirty and expose themselves to the bacteria that will help them grow immunities in the future. Hand sanitizer is common place in almost all public areas these days and people are using it every chance they get. The problem that arises is if these children don’t create a basic immune system for later in life, they are going to get more severe sicknesses from the get go and potentially be at risk for more severe ones later on.

Asthma rates among children are at all time highs and the amount of time children are playing outside, in areas that expose their immune systems, are at all time lows. This is only going to get worse if we don’t do something. So next time you have a cold or a mild sickness, you might feel like crap, but it might be better to avoid taking antibiotics unless it is absolutely necessary. The same goes for your children if you are a parent. We all want to live in a healthy world with no major disease outbreaks, so let’s use the resources we have sparingly in order to give those creating new cures time.

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Great points that summarize why I avoid prescriptions almost entirely.

I don't like taking antibiotics. I don't like how often doctors recommends them. I have a theory that Pharmaceutical industry has the cure to many diseases but they won't release it because they make more money by treating than curing.
I am sure others share my theory as well. Anyway thanks for posting.

I'm an avid researcher in biotechnology/bioinformatics. I would have to respectfully disagree stating that the etiology - cause of the disease in many cases are only just been realized through the assistance of new (2014) biotech profiling techniques, which have shown the biochemical structure of various DNA replication mechanisms, namely CRISPR-Cas9. Through the assistance and evolution of computing power, many molecules or potential drugs can be virtually administered and studied.
It is a long haul to get any drug on the market, but I suspect in the next decade, the amount of treatment potentials would exponentially increase

Something interesting to discuss, basically antibiotics are given for diseases with certain conditions with the aim of inhibiting the spread of germs and accelerate healing. But the understanding and awareness of drug consumption to run out according to prescribed prescription is rarely applied, many side effects occur, such as germs will be resistant to the drug with the dose and then later if the disease returns should be given a higher dose. There is now an attempt to avoid the use of antibiotics for those who have never consume them

I am certainly very worried about how we are abusing our staple antibiotics and causing resistance to build.

In the long run I am very optimistic that advances in microbiology and nanotechnology will allow for many new anti-microbial discoveries. Just look at dirt.

Source: biologist

I've had both of my knees replaced. When I did the first one, the recommendation was to take antibiotics before going to the dentist for the rest of your life. By the time I had the second one done, they were recommending them for only the first two years after the replacement. Now, they're back to recommending them for life again. I've been to the dentist numerous times since the second knee surgery and haven't taken antibiotics, and it hasn't been an issue. Same thing with my mother. She has mitral valve prolapse, and for decades was told to take antibiotics before going to the dentist. In the past few years, though, they've told her recommendations have changed, and she could stop taking them.

Interesting thing about polio. I never knew it was a class-based thing. My grandfather's mother (so, my great-grandmother) died of polio two days before her 41st birthday, while 8 months pregnant with what would have been her 9th child in 1935. One of her other eight children had polio, and she nursed him through it, but then got it herself. I asked my great-uncle (her youngest child, who was only three when she died) once if any effort was made to save her baby, who was far enough along to survive on her own. He said his dad, being already overwhelmed with eight kids and having just lost their primary caretaker, told the doctors to wait before removing the baby. So, she was stillborn because they waited, but that's how they knew it was a girl. Different times, man.

Thanks for sharing these personal sad stories Steph. It grounds us when we hear things like that.

I guess it is a sad story. I never thought about it too much as that, as it's a story I grew up hearing. It was told many times. I finally got to visit my grandfather's mother's grave in 2005, when I was living in New Hampshire (she's buried in Massachusetts). She's in the same plot as her parents, and although the baby isn't mentioned on a stone, I assume she's in there with her.

My great-uncle told me none of the family, not even her husband (my great-grandfather) could go to the graveside services, as they were all quarantined for possible exposure to polio. They had the funeral at the house, and her husband and kids had to all watch from the upstairs landing, then couldn't go with them when they took her away.

I've got several photos of her. She was gorgeous.

good information ....

I think antiobitcs are very bad for our health, i try to not use them even when the doctor tells me to take them, i tried that and it works !! our body is so powerfull and can heal itself, 7 years Antibiotics free and i'm proud !!

They literally hand out antibiotics like candy these days.
It's only a matter of time before we experience a new "black plague"

Yuck :/

All we say that antibiotics there are not good for us or for our children... But we have forgotten the natural antibiotics... There are many herbs in the nature and if you know the correct combination you can make the strongest medicines.

Great post as i also wrote for health and beauty tips
you can also watch
https://steemit.com/beauty/@dailybeauty-tips/best-home-made-remedy-for-bright-and-glowing-skin

good post.

Probably one of the more informative and genuine writers here.

Thank you very much for all your very helpful tips to stay healthy. You're doing a good job

That is the scary things about these pathogens.
They are gaining antibiotic resistance and I'm scared one day we will not have an antibiotic for them

Well, when our bodies start to develop resistance to antibiotics, then we will have some serious problems.

Lol!

Thank you for sharing. I can attest a time in my life where my eating habits were not as healthy as they should have been and I ended up getting sick a lot. I was never the kind of person to get sick either. I found that due to all of the dairy I was consuming (there are traces of antibiotics in the animal and animal byproducts) AND the enhanced amount of stress I was under at the time contributed to me being ill. I was put on antibiotics throughout that year and my immune system never recovered. I decided to change my diet and became a vegetarian who gave up all dairy except eggs. I noticed a HUGE difference and my body healed with more whole and less processed foods and no dairy. I realized how many antibiotics are prescribed even if it was not determined to be a bacterial or viral illness...if used too liberally we do tend to see these drugs less effective and mutate to become resistant. What we eat truly can help or hinder our health.

Nice article, but if you go to the doctor for a stomach virus, you never go home with antibiotics, because they dont work on viruses. Antibiotics only work on bacteria.

This article I really like, the resistance caused by antibiotics in bacteria is becoming a global problem. I would like to add that studies carried out by scientists from the European Union, have found that many of these antibiotics that are expelled by the urine, are representing a danger, since they go to water systems, generating resistance in the bacteria that are found in the environment.

Good article and interesting discussion on antibiotic resistance and other diseases. While I was in Nicaragua a few years back, a doctor told me that due to lack of resources, courses of antibiotics were being split up, so that more people could have some antibiotics, with the devastating effect that bacteria were becoming more resistant, and the people weren't beating the infections. I hope that that has changed now that people are more aware of antibiotic resistance!

I have a few comments about your article. I think that some ideas are being implicitly combined, which are actually somewhat separate. For instance, your point about hygiene may be especially relevant to autoimmune diseases (like your asthma example), but is relevant to disease immunity in a different way. You can become immune to certain bacteria and viruses, but not all, and usually the immune system becomes specifically immune to an antigen (i.e. an exposure to lots of bacteria would not make me immune to polio).

In fact, the hygiene hypothesis model of polio proposed that severe polio was less common in lower socioeconomic status because lower socioeconomic status individuals tended to contract polio at an earlier age, when it seemed to have less severe effects on the body - not that people from lower socioeconomic status didn't contract polio as much. See this paper, for example.

Finally, I would also just add the point that vaccines act exactly by stimulating the immune system! Vaccines are super important to the health of large groups of people by conveying herd immunity and very different from antibiotics. Yes, we all want to live in a healthy world with no major disease outbreaks, so let's all get vaccinated, but also use antibiotics sparingly for those who truly need it!

Like your scientifically informed comment! Need more of these! Checked out your channel too and you got a new follower!

Nice also to hear you make the important point that vaccines ≠ antibiotics. And the article didn't conflate the two, either, which is good.

I believe more sterile environments make your immune system weaker also. Just travel to a less developed, less antibiotic-rich country and drink the local water and eat the local food, and you will see how unprepared an immune system can be. And of course, the locals are all smiling and happy while your immune system makes the necessary adjustments.

I 100% agree. Our bodies are designed to fight minor and sometimes major illnesses. Antibiotics are a short term solution.

Excelent Post!. Followed you

Eating properly and exercising and general healthy living is a must. That alone will cut down disease rates significantly. I myself, when I started following a healthy lifestyle, didn't get sick for ~2 years. I got sick again last winter and it was like a trip down memory lane: I was like "oh, yeah, this is what it feels like!" Instead of feeling down I was very keen on examining every single sensation!

And yeah, once you get sick, you should let the disease follow its natural course. Yes it might take 2 weeks for you to feel tip-top again, but taking antibiotics in a hair-trigger manner is gonna be worse in the long run, and for people in general, not just you: taking antibiotics is a public act, not a private one, much like smoking.

But why do people do it? I don't think their reluctance to suffer through the disease is the number one reason. I think the number one reason is their jobs. For poor people especially, in the U.S., missing just one day might get you fired. So people do whatever it takes to just keep the machine running. That's why everything is interconnected: if you want to fight antibiotic resistance, you can't just concentrate on that one single issue, everything else must also be improved. That's often something people fail to realize, how every single thing affects every other.

Anyway, those are my two cents!

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

When I was a med. student, I had an old Dr. as one of my professors, and one day he said: "If you get a cough, don't worry, it will be over in 7 days with or without medication. Let your body fight, and avoid antibiotics!
I have practiced it for years in my household, and we never get sick.

Yes, antibiotic use is out of control in this country, as well as germ-killing household sanitizers and products. People don't realize that when we kill 99.9% of germs, the 00.1% that remain are the ones that are going to get strong enough to kill us!

yea the MDR's =multidrug resistants

All microbs and viruses can be destroyed from the near enviroment with the help of the UV lamp.The quality of air will be better with the help of a ionizer.

A person has to be very careful when consuming antibiotics as the side effects can make you feel worse than when you start taking the antibiotics.

Milk, cheese and other dairy products can be negative when dosing medication through prescribed period. You would not want to see your enemy going through the nausea, vomiting, etc. much less yourself or someone you love. Toilets are a nearby must when consuming antibiotics.

I have had my share of bad experiences taking antibiotics, yep, it's not a good feeling at all. Not a good feeling... I am telling you. smh.

Peace,
Delva Reid
2theworld

Not to mention there are tons of natural alternatives to treat infection. Probiotics, silver, manuka honey, essential oils, the list goes on. We need to get back to our roos. Use natural alterntives nature has made and stop relying on antibiotics so heaviyl.

This is a problem that any reputable doctor will confess to. The legal dimension is the root of the problem, as doctors mitigate short term risks and consequently the liability by oversubscribing antibiotics even though they are fully aware that the over consumption of antibiotics 1) messup the immune system of the patient 2) lead to the evolution of tougher bugs with greater antibiotic resistance.
Old school doctors have known this for quite some time and I have seen some of them not use gloves, and known one who intentionally has poor bathroom hygiene specifically for the sole purpose of maintaining a healthy immune system.

Enjoyed reading this posting! Upvot!
You may also be interested in the posting regarding same topic!
https://steemit.com/science/@alex.the.one/3-you-should-appreciate-for-bacteria-1-2

In South Africa antibiotics are prescribed for everything! I have found a doctor who agrees with my view on them; but it is still difficult as I have 2 young sons and have to remind myself I am allowing their illnesses to run their course for their benefit. As a parent you don't want to see your child suffer. It's a tightrope to walk.

I just want to add one thing " right antibiotics in right amount to the right person at right time is very important to avoid resistance "

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Be smart and use a natural antibiotic called colloidal silver. It kills all super germs.
https://steemit.com/health/@ikoshi/little-things-that-matter-your-health