Health chief warns: age of safe medicine is ending
Antibiotic crisis will make routine operations impossible and a scratched knee could be fatal
The world is entering an era where injuries as common as a child's scratched knee could kill, where patients entering hospital gamble with their lives and where routine operations such as a hip replacement become too dangerous to carry out, the head of the World Health Organisation (WHO) has warned.
This sort of doom-crying really annoys me. YES, antibiotic resistance is a serious, even life-threatening issue but medicine existed prior to antibiotics, it will continue in a hypothetical post-antibiotic future (and it's not going to be completely without antibiotics in any case). My father, who is still alive, started his pharmacy/chemist career when penicillin was a new and experimental drug, it wasn't that long ago.
Worst case we go back to older methods - sterilization with non-antibiotic substances (bleach, heat, UV, other chemicals already mentioned). Scratched knees will still be mostly too benign to see a doctor about, although how infections are managed likely would change. For that matter, scratched knees are potentially fatal
now, and in some circumstances even today doctors use excision of infected tissue and other non "chemotherapy" techniques to treat serious and complicated infections (I have a 4 cm scar along my jaw line from such an excision that occurred alongside antibiotic treatment).
mr friendly guy wrote:How can people take antibiotics for trivial stuff without a doctor's prescription?
In the US, the usual way this happens is that someone gets a script for a legitimate reason but doesn't finish it, saving the "extra" pills for "just in case". Then, later, either that person takes those pills for another, no-doctor-involved situation, or passes them on to someone else. The possibility of said pills being either improperly stored and/or expired just adds to the excitement.
mr friendly guy wrote:MRSA (sorry "mercer" for the Americans
) is a skin infection,
Actually, over here it's pronounced more as "mersuh", except for certain areas on the East Coast. No terminal "r" sound.
Stas Bush wrote:Sea Skimmer wrote:We don't just get the super germs from antibiotics, we also get them from the massive use of disinfectants on everything
Resistence from cleaning solutions? Seriously? So people in the First World clean and sterilize rooms using antibiotics? What the bloody fuck of a method is that.
Because outside, you know, people sterilize rooms with UV sterilizators and, uh... clean spirit. Maybe supertoxic acid solutions, too. That's about it.
Same here, actually - I suspect Sea Skimmer hasn't done his research. Bleach is so much cheaper it's the usual go-to for large area disinfection, not antibiotics. I suspect he's confusing many cleaning solutions with some heavily-marketed-to-idiots-in-suburbia handsoaps and the like.
Andrew_Fireborn wrote:I know my relations buy antibacterial hand soap.
^ and some of those do use antibiotics and are part of the problem.
A large number of cleaners advertise as killing 99.9% of germs on surfaces...
That does not, however, require antibiotics. Alcohols and bleaches can do that, and they are not antibiotics nor do they promote antibiotic resistance.
The waterless hand cleaner I buy for work, for example, is alcohol based (which has the nice effect of removing some of the oils and colored polishes I also use). The cleaning wipes we use work with bleach. They are both useful for keeping the place clean, reducing transmission between us and our customers, and have the benefit of also killing many types of fungus which aren't touched by antibiotics anyhow. None of them, however, promote antibiotic resistance. Basically, you can disinfect without adding to the problem. I wish more people would do this in an intelligent manner.