Antibiotics - do we need them and how to make them, page
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reply posted on 23-12-2009 @ 04:03 AM by logicalview
reply to post by freakyclown



Having absolutely no medical knowledge whatsoever i couldnt really answer that question. However, i suspect that antibiotics in todays society just save more lives, whereas without them those lives would be lost.

Mankind obviously did survive without them in the past, but x million would have died every year from conditions that today would be treated with a several day course of antibiotics.


reply posted on 23-12-2009 @ 04:18 AM by georgejetson
reply to post by freakyclown



Man survived before antibiotics, but with a much higher mortality rate. If we ran out of antibiotics, pretty quickly people would start dying of what we now consider minor, easily cured diseases.

The other thing is that bacterial infections tend to have really nasty symptoms, that we never see because they always get treated before they get too bad. Without antibiotics, we'd start seeing biblical plague type stuff, with people dying of excruciating disfiguring diseases. Look up the symptoms of syphilis or bubonic plague, if you have a strong enough stomach.



reply posted on 24-12-2009 @ 09:44 PM by iamcamouflage
reply to post by endisnighe



The problem with hydrogen peroxide is that it doesnt keep. It has a short shelf life and breaks down rapidly in the presence of light. Works great but long term storage just isnt an option



reply posted on 25-12-2009 @ 12:57 AM by whitewave
Originally posted by iamcamouflage
reply to
post by endisnighe



The problem with hydrogen peroxide is that it doesn't keep. It has a short shelf life and breaks down rapidly in the presence of light. Works great but long term storage just isn't an option


I haven't found that to be particularly true. I have a large bottle of 35% H2O2 that has been on my shelf for over a year. It's been in a dark blue bottle away from sunlight in a coolish place and is still just as caustic as it ever was.

I still use it from time to time as the occasion necessitates and it's still just as effective as when I first got it.

My list sounds a lot like Maya's list. Plus, there are a lot of herbals that are known to have antibacterial, antiviral, antifungal properties.


reply posted on 3-1-2010 @ 06:52 PM by archistrage
Most of the foods you eat contain certain chemicals/molecules/compounds/etc, that have naturally occurring 'healing' properties, specifically fruits and vegetables. Cranberries and pomegranates are some of the best things to eat whenever you are sick. Both contain antibiotic and antiviral compounds. Whenever I've been sick, my mom always goes to the store and buys bottles of cranberry juice, and by the next day, I feel 100%. There are even pill which are extract of Cranberries and Pomegranates. Another plant, Stachys monnieri, commonly called the All Heal, has so many healing properties that people all over the world have used it for thousands of years to heal ailments. There are even some who consider the plant given to mankind by God to heal our afflictions.

This knowledge is not some, Indian Myth, Treehugger crap to get you to love every weed in your backyard. These are real facts, with real applications. Native Americans used to chew the bark on certain trees because they had found it to relieve pain. Now-a-days pharmaceutical companies extract a chemical from that same tree, which is used to make aspirin.

There's also one option, that many people don't like, but will always serve you well in the end, and that is just to get sick. Your body is not formed knowing how to fight all kinds of diseases, it has to learn along the way with you. Taking every measure to avoid a slight cough will only come to bite you in the butt when the SHTF. When you're faced with some deadly disease, and your body has no means by which to fight it. Mothers should always breastfeed their babies. Breast milk is known to contain antibodies, which is one of the first steps for the babies body to learn to fight diseases, as well as protecting them.

A few months ago, everyone in my family came down with swine flu. It did nothing more to us that have us sleep in for 2 or 3 days. Every single one of us was breast fed, we had all been sick plenty of times before, and we pulled through like it was anything else. The person who had it worse was my teen sister, who had to stay in bed for a week and just sleep. Guess what? She is the most germaphobic person I know. She's been sick the least amount of times of anyone in our family, and she refuses to do any kind of work and/or chore that has the slightest possibility of exposing her to germs.

Diseases are a part of life. They feel a certain niche in the hierarchical order of nature. Every time we come up with some new vaccine or cure to a disease, and remove it from that niche, there is always a new one there to take its place. They're a part of life, and we just have to live with them either way.

Archistrage
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