"Anthropomorphic epidemic" Abstract We are all familiar with the fact that nature supports humans in many ways, but nature resists the resistance of humans to protect themselves from external interference, nature Destroying and invading often leads to complications. . As nature strikes back, we will destroy nature. Illness is a very controversial issue - the environment and economic problems; however, these diseases are basically caused by humans, just like natural disasters.
McKenna: I started when I was working on the last book, Superbug, which was published seven years ago. I entered this project and I thought that there are two epidemics in MRSA. One of the hospitals dates back to the early stages of the antibiotic era. The second one is a bigger and more mysterious community epidemic that killed children in the 1990s and ended professional athletes' careers. And we could not cope as society. However, I noticed that there were no two pandemics in the second half of the report, and that there were actually three epidemics in fact. The third is MRSA on the farm. Whereas people condemn antibiotic resistance against drugs, farmers have given 63,000 tons of antibiotics per year to livestock, which basically has no meaning to me. The more I dig, the more we discover that agriculture is weakening it all about what medicine is talking about how conservative and cautious we should be.
In recent years we have raised a warning that so-called superbacteria (pathogenic microorganisms resistant to many (or all) antibiotics) are becoming increasingly faster. Many people do not seem to be aware that superb bacteria are already here - they are already killing people. The main example is Candida auris, a multidrug-resistant fungal infection becoming a serious global health threat. C.auris was first discovered in Japan in 2009, in the ear of a patient complaining of infection. (Auris is the Latin for the ear.) Since then, C. Auris was recorded as a cause of wound infection, bloodstream infection, ear infection, respiratory infection on four continents including India, Kuwait, Pakistan, South Africa, South Korea and South America.
Antibiotic-resistant bacteria, often referred to as "superbacteria", causing pneumonia, urinary tract infections and skin infections are just a few of the dangers people are facing today. CRE superbacteria has its own ability to spread and share antibiotic resistance with healthy bacteria. It can cause infection when they enter the bladder, blood, or other areas not belonging to these bacteria. As this happens it can lead to infection, even if not impossible, it is difficult to treat effectively