by Expatriot » Fri 13 Aug 2010, 07:52:25
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tanada', 'T')his is the doing of lazy human nature, instead of determining what people are sick from and targeting the specific bacteria Doctors for the last 60 years have just flooded people with general anti-bacterial medication and now our descendants will reap the results with the return of many minor diseases that will each kill 2-5% of the population.
I'm a bit more cynical. I'd ascribe the overuse of antibiotics to . . .
1. The ignorance of your average mother/sick person.
2. The greed of doctors.
If I was a doctor, I'd tell the mom - hey, your kid has a virus, and there's nothing I can do. Give him a few days. If he's not better, call me.
But that would mean that the patient would find another doctor.
EDIT - BTW, this issue is not one of a "superbug," but rather of a "supergene." What they figured out a decade or two ago is that particularly useful genes, like the one described, can jump between species. Eventually, it is presummed, the gene will make its way to Staph and TB and then it's kaPow for all of us.