Название: Natural Alternatives to Antibiotics: How you can Supercharge Your Immune System and Fight Infection
Автор: Литагент HarperCollins USD
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Здоровье
isbn: 9780008212896
isbn:
Antibiotics applied to the skin are widely used in hospitals and can lead to resistant strains rapidly emerging (this is something which has been observed when extensive use of antibiotics are involved in treating burns cases, for example).
It is common for people who spend time in the hospital – staff as well as patients – to become colonized with resistant bacteria, especially in their intestinal tracts (so allowing the bacteria to appear in their feces) and on the skin.
It is all too easy for staff to pass such resistant bacteria around as they touch patients, their beds or their food.
When catheters are used or injections given, previously harmless skin bacteria which may have been modified into disease-causing bacteria can enter through the broken skin, causing infection, sometimes extremely seriously, of the bloodstream.15
Unless scrupulous hygiene is observed, bacteria on the skin or in the feces can become the means whereby outbreaks of highly contagious resistant bacteria can take place in hospitals.
There exist (undetected by routine checks) highly infectious bacteria in hospital air-conditioning units, which can act to spread infection from ward to ward.16
Solutions lie in better hygiene and hospital organization, although to an extent the factors prevailing in these hothouses of disease management cannot easily be altered and solutions need to also involve patient and medical staff education as well as removal of the pressure exerted by drug manufacturers on those who prescribe the drugs.
Summary
Bacteria have developed resistance to antibiotics because of:
natural selection – genetic modification of the bacteria as they defend themselves from chemical assault
inappropriate and excessive use of antibiotics in food production, notably beef, milk and chickens
inappropriate and excessive use of antibiotics in treating humans – as discussed above
poor cooperation by patients (not completing courses of antibiotics, for example)
increased opportunities for cross-infections which allow resistant bacteria to transfer this characteristic to other bacteria, so spreading the pool of resistant microorganisms
increasing existence of unhygienic conditions where cross-infections become more likely (e.g. needle sharing)
particular characteristics prevailing in hospital environments which encourage the development of resistant strains – as well as a higher risk of cross-infection via patient-to-patient contact, or transmitted via hospital personnel.
This book’s task is to point to solutions to the crisis which is already here. Your task is to try to do something about this crisis in your own life – by learning more, trying harder to accept responsibility for enhancing your own health, and doing your best to ensure that the truth about antibiotics spreads.
People demand antibiotics, and doctors commonly comply, often knowing that taking them is worse than useless in a given situation. People who understand these dangers will help doctors to reserve the use of antibiotics to those times when they are indeed life-savers.
2: Bacteria – The Good, the Bad, and the Frightening
We have seen something of the crisis in which we find ourselves as a result of misguided use of the potentially life-saving antibiotic drugs –
because they are prescribed to treat conditions they cannot help
because they are wildly and massively overused in conditions that would get better on their own
because they are prescribed in the wrong dosage, wrong combinations (or not in combination when this would be a better strategy), wrong situations, for inappropriate lengths of time – often in the hot-house situations which exist in hospitals, the ‘superbug factories’
because they are used in agriculture, animal – dairy, meat and fish – as well as some fruit production, in a staggering and seemingly uncontrolled way.
And as a result of all of these misuses of antibiotics we are witnessing the looming crisis of bacterial infections which will be untreatable.
This monster – the totally antibiotic-resistant bacteria which are being unleashed on the human and animal kingdom – will require strategies other than more and more powerful antibiotics. These strategies form much of the remainder of this book, after examining what antibiotics actually do in Chapters 3 and 4.
In this chapter we will get to know some of the cast of characters involved in this saga – those that live in and on us, at best enormously beneficial and at worst potentially disease-causing, as well as a number of the bacteria which cause disease, sometimes mild but often with the potential, in the right circumstances (right for them, wrong for us) to cause life-threatening illness.
The (Usually) Friendly Bacteria
There are actually hundreds of different bacterial organisms and many more different strains living inside us, many doing useful jobs, as we will see. However, there are only a few which are present in really large numbers, and it is these which we will now examine briefly. For further details of their functions, what can harm them and what we can do to encourage their (and therefore our) health, see Chapters 9 and 10.
There is evidence that under the appropriate conditions, some of the friendly bacteria can become dangerous to us. One such situation can occur when there has been excessive use СКАЧАТЬ