Antibiotic Resistance to Flu, Colds, Viruses, and Bacterial Infections

Did you know that over 2 million people per year contract an infection while they are in the hospital and 90,000 die from infections they contracted while in the hospital?

Makes you wonder just how safe is the hospital.

Recently there was an article in the AARP magazine that could sent cold chills up the spine. We had always known there was a high degree of risk, when going into the hospital, of contracting an infection you didn't have when you got there. But we had no idea how high the risk really was. According to this article, hospital infections are sited as the nation's sixth-leading cause of death. Shocking. All the numbers were shocking, from the 2 million people per year that get an infection while in the hospital to the 90,000 per year who die of them.

It just makes good sense to boost your immune system in every way possible before checking into the hospital. We gave our mother a dose of the product we are endorsing on this page, just a few weeks before she had to go into the hospital for heart surgery. We were so glad she had the antidote in her system because almost everyone we know who has gone into a hospital for surgery has contracted a staff infection. Mom didn't. Of course, we can't prove the antidote was the reason but it must have helped.

Antibiotic Resistance - What it is and Why You Should Be Concerned

The triumph of antibiotics over disease-causing bacteria is one of modern medicine's greatest success stories. Since these drugs first became widely used in the World War II era, they have saved countless lives and blunted serious complications of many feared diseases and infections. After more than 50 years of widespread use, however, many antibiotics don't pack the same punch they once did.

Over time, some bacteria have developed ways to outwit the effects of antibiotics. Widespread use of antibiotics is thought to have spurred evolutionary changes in bacteria that allow them to survive these powerful drugs. While antibiotic resistance benefits the microbes, it presents humans with two big problems: it makes it more difficult to purge infections from the body; and it heightens the risk of acquiring infections in a hospital.

Diseases such as tuberculosis, gonorrhea, malaria, and childhood ear infections are now more difficult to treat than they were decades ago. Drug resistance is an especially difficult problem for hospitals because they harbor critically ill patients who are more vulnerable to infections than the general population and therefore require more antibiotics.

What is Tamiflu?

Tamiflu is one type of medicine that doctors feel may be effective against the avian bird flu. Things to remember about Tamiflu: It must be administered within 48 hours of onset of symptoms. It may not be available, should a pandemic occur. It is expensive.

Read More About Tamiflu

Antibiotics Statistics

Strains of S. aureus resistant to methicillin are endemic in hospitals and are increasing in non-hospital settings such as locker rooms. Since September 2000, outbreaks of methicillin-resistant S. aureus infections have been reported among high school football players and wrestlers in California, Indiana, and Pennsylvania, according to the CDC.

The first S. aureus infections resistant to vancomycin emerged in the United States in 2002, presenting physicians and patients with a serious problem. In July 2002, the CDC reported that a Michigan patient with diabetes, vascular disease, and chronic kidney failure had developed the first S. aureus infection completely resistant to vancomycin. A similar case was reported in Pennsylvania in September 2002.

Increasing reliance on vancomycin has led to the emergence of vancomycin-resistant enterococci infections. Prior to 1989, no U.S. hospital had reported any vancomycin resistant enterococci, but over the next decade, such microbes have become common in U.S. hospitals, according to CDC.

A 2003 study in The New England Journal of Medicine found that the incidence of blood and tissue infections known as sepsis almost tripled from 1979 to 2000.

 

 

 


 
By Denise Wilson
2008-04-27 19:01:53
 

I continue to get Staff Infections every year. The most recent was Zoster over my eye. How do I build my immune system to fight off these infections? Doctors continue to put me on different antibiotics. I feel that it must be a more serious problem being that I get them at least once a year, when ever I have some sort of trauma to my skin. Some times I get them without trauma. It starts off like a small itching little bump and starts to spread into little tiny blisters that spread and become infected. Please help me get this under control through diet and cleansing techniques that may help me. I feel like my body is under attack, and I'm very scared. Thank You

 
By Dr. Leia
2008-04-30 08:48:14
 

Dear Denise, What you seem to be describing is a Herpes virus condition, which is called Herpes Zoster. A Staph infection is a bacterial infection and is different from a Herpes infection. A Herpes infection is a virus which lives deep within the nerve plexus and resides there where no medication can eradicate it. It appears as a sequel to the Chickenpox virus which most of us have been exposed to as during childhood. It causes outbreaks when you are stressed or your immune system is weakened. Antibiotics are not effective against the Herpes virus, but are effective against a Staph virus. You might want to talk to your doctor about your condition and get clarity about whether it is a Herpes Zoster infection or a Staph infection. And I am sure that you will find that the medication which he or she prescribes for the Herpes will be an antiviral medicine and not an antibiotic.

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