New 'superbug' found in UK hospitals, page
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ATS Members have flagged this thread 4 times


reply posted on 10-8-2010 @ 09:29 PM by Liberal1984
Someone has already posted this thread in the Breaking News section.
www.abovetopsecret.com...

I'm sorry eightfold but Idon't thing your allowed to double post on this website. Might be wrong; but that's my 2 cense before anyone else spends time replying (here).

Apart from that not good news, the manmade bird pandemic didn't work out so well, but nevermind as it looks like they'll have what they want from the floor of a hospital!

[edit on 090705 by Liberal1984]



reply posted on 10-8-2010 @ 10:04 PM by eightfold
reply to post by Liberal1984



Ahhh no you misunderstand - I didn't double post. In the 'breaking news' forum you don't fill in a standard 'new thread' page - it automatically makes two posts based on different boxes in the form. Everything you put in the comments box gets made into a separate 'second' post.

My post here was just to point out my thread on the same topic.


reply posted on 11-8-2010 @ 08:52 AM by VneZonyDostupa
Originally posted by Doc Velocity
Sheesh. ANOTHER "global pandemic" brought to you by a medical community that can't identify nor trace the source of any given "super bug," but they're certain that it's going global.

Yeah, right. HIV/AIDS and H1N1 and Ebola and all the other global menaces utterly failed to fulfill the doomsday prophecies.

Interesting, don't you think, that this new "super bug" is making its debut in the most heavily-funded socialized healthcare system in the world, the British NHS?

— Doc Velocity


Please don't confuse medical consensus with pop culture talking points. It has never been suggested by any reliable medical body that HIV/AIDS or ebola were "global menaces", unless you were in the risk groups (IV drug user for HIV or eating bushmeat for ebola, for example).

The reason this is called a "super bug" isn't because they think it is going to be a pandemic or because it is unnaturally strong. Superbug is the term given to any bacterial strain that has developed resistance to a commonly used antibiotic. It makes it harder, but not impossible, to treat.

As for is showing up in England, their healthcare system has absolutely nothing to do with it. It's just freak chance based on antibiotic use. Most superbugs have shown up in the United States first because people here use antibiotics like they're TicTacs. It's less likely to occur in England due to lower antibiotic use, but isn't an impossibility. It's all based on mutation rate and challenge rate.
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