Jonathan Benson
Natural News
Mon, 16 Aug 2010 19:16 CDT

© binalshah.wordpress.com
The journal
Lancet Infectious Diseases recently published a sobering piece about how antibiotics are becoming wholly ineffective as treatments for infection. According to the report,
even the most powerful antibiotics available are largely inadequate at tackling the emerging forms of new and powerful "super" bacteria.
Antibiotic overuse has become a pandemic problem. They are used in animal feed to make animals grow more quickly and they are handed out like candy by many doctors to people with almost any ailment. And they are simply not working anymore to fight infection.
Published by Professor Tim Walsh and his colleagues, the paper explains how a new gene called NDM 1 is changing the way infectious bacteria survive. The NDM 1 gene passes among bacteria like
E. Coli and
Klebsiella pneumoniae and makes them resistant to antibiotics. Even carbapenems, the most powerful antibiotics available, are no match for these new bacteria.
"This is potentially the end. There are no antibiotics in the pipeline that have activity against NDM 1-producing enterobacteriaceae. We have a bleak window of maybe ten years where we are going to have to use the antibiotics we have very wisely, but also grapple with the reality that we have nothing to treat these infections with," explained Walsh in a recent
Guardian piece.
According to Dr. Livermore, director of the antibiotic resistance monitoring and reference laboratory at the U.K. Health Protection Agency, the entirety of modern medicine could collapse as a result of antibiotics becoming useless.
"A lot of modern medicine would become impossible if we lost our ability to treat infections," he emphasized.
Sources for this story include:
The Guardian:
Are you ready for a world without antibiotics?
Humanity survived just fine without swallowing these poisons for millions of years. This article assumes that a world without antibiotics is a bad thing. Instead of a "world without antibiotics", how about a "world with health"? Let's treat the cause of disease, not its symptoms. Let's promote healthy lifestyles and toxin-free environments so that infectious disease cannot gain a foothold within the body in the first place. Yes, Big Pharma will never support this approach as they would rather sell us expensive toxins which will then require more expensive toxins to treat the symptoms of the expensive toxins which....you get the idea.