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First published by Thorsons as
Antibiotic Crisis, Antibiotic Alternatives 1998
© Leon Chaitow 1998
Leon Chaitow asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
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Source ISBN 9780007122479
Ebook Edition © JULY 2016 ISBN: 9780008212896
Version: 2016-08-24
Contents
Chapter 1 The Antibiotic Crisis
Chapter 2 Bacteria – The Good, the Bad, and the Frightening
Chapter 3 The Story So Far: A Brief History of Antibiotic Use
Chapter 4 How the Major Antibiotics Work – and Some Problems
Chapter 5 Immune Enhancement: Lifestyle, Detoxification, and Mind-Body Factors
Chapter 6 Immune Enhancement: Supplements, Herbs, Hydrotherapy, and Acupuncture
Chapter 7 Ecological Damage Caused by Antibiotics – The Yeast Connection
Chapter 8 Antibiotics, Bowel Flora, and Illness
Chapter 9 Probiotics – What to Do If You Have to Take Antibiotics
Chapter 10 Children, Antibiotics, and Probiotics
Crisis, What Crisis?
Health care in the industrialized world has never been more available, or so we are told.
More and better hospitals are built (are there more sick people?).
Ever more complex and high-tech treatments are devised.
Life-expectancy rates are rising (quantity, perhaps, but what of quality?).
Research continues at breakneck pace into all aspects of disease causation and treatment.
New, highly trained doctors and nurses are turned out every year.
… And yet there really is a crisis, as we will see.
Old diseases such as TB which were thought to be history are back, and are often untreatable because the bacterial agents which cause the infections have become resistant to antibiotics which previously controlled them easily.
This acquired resistance presents an enormous threat to the health of us all, not just those who are malnourished and impoverished.
Whether or not more and more hospitals and high-tech diagnostic and treatment methods equate with better health for the general public is itself open to question. However, what is not debatable is the fact that one of the most potent tools in the medical tool-box, antibiotics, are no longer working on many extremely dangerous bacteria, or only work when used in amounts so high that they are likely to cause serious side-effects.
The evolution of antibiotic-resistant bacteria – superbugs – therefore forms a significant part of the story we need to examine in order to understand the crisis.
The UK Office of Health Economics reported in September 19971 that –
5,000 people are being killed every year in British hospitals by infections they catch – when they are in the hospital.
A further 15,000 people’s deaths are being contributed to infections they catch – when they are in the hospital.
One in every 16 patients who goes into the hospital for anything at all will develop a ‘hospital acquired infection’ (HAI) – a serious illness which they catch from someone in the hospital, usually a member of staff.
In intensive care units the rate is as high as one patient in every five developing an HAI.
The most common of the infections acquired in this way relate to the bladder,