larryshoat wrote:Two million people a year get bacterial infections while they're hospitalized and 90,000 of them die from the infections, according to the Infectious Diseases Society of America. Some 70 percent of the infections prove to be resistant to at least one drug.
This is the kind of warped logic these people are famous for. Another example of, if you tell a lie enough it becomes defacto the truth. I mean really, how many of those 90,000 deaths would have been prevented if sub-theraputic use of antibiotics were eleminated? Sounds like the blame for that should go to the hospitals.
Larry
The point is that there is a very real decline in the effectiveness in people of many formerly mainstay antibiotics. Nature has a way of building resistance. The article does not say those deaths are the result of "sub-theraputic" use of antibiotics but uses that statistic to point out resistance is there.
There are obvious examples of nature's adaptation.
If one looks at the natural development of Round-up resistant weeds, we were told this will never happen but RU resistant weeds now exist. Or the need, even requirement, to plant a certain percent of non-BT corn as a bug "refuge", there is recognition that nature builds up a resistance to constant use of the same product. Especially low level use of the same product.
We can either listen to the concerns behind this editorial or we can try to sweep it under the rug. The choice is ours. It is a fact that resistance builds in nature.
As any good retailer will tell you, however, if you are selling something, whether it is beef or shampoo, it is a good idea to listen to your customers. And even though most of us don't sell retail we still need to listen to the enduser that pays the bills.
This issue of "sub-theraputic use of anti-biotics" just gives the anti beef people another tool in their toolbox. This is just a heads-up on something that, in my opinion, is not going to go away. We can ignore it if we choose, or blame the article on the "media". But we do that at our own peril.
Jim