Labels: Cures for antibiotic bacteria available NOW, cures for MRSA & multiply resistant TB and C Diff, how to slash the cost of treating antibiotic resistant bacteria in hospitals
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Cures for antibiotic
bacteria available NOW....
Today's Post: Tuesday, 9-24-2013
A. Background:
My wife is a history buff and loves to read well done
history books. One of the times in
history that interests her most is the American Civil War.
These books spend some time on the lives of the people
involved outside of their roles in the history.
One thing that jumps out at her are how often people then
died suddenly and how much time people spent going to funerals.
That has NOT been true for decades since then. Why not?
1. Public health and
sanitation are at least half the reason which people often don’t know is so!
So many people died during the Civil War or were
incapacitated from disease caused by lack of these things, in between that time
and the end of World War II, the American military made huge strides in using
preventive public health and sanitation.
And, these advances have been used across the country.
2. Since then, we
have found effective vaccines against many adult and childhood disease that
used to kill so many.
3. But the really big
reason is that since the ending years of World War II, we have had effective
antibiotics.
B. THAT is on its way
to becoming no longer the case!
To some degree that threatens your life and the lives of
people you care about or depend on.
Worse, the dollar cost of fighting antibiotic resistant
infections is rapidly becoming a really large issue in our total health care
costs.
According to the CDC, at least 2 million people in the U.S.
become infected with bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics, and at least
23,000 people die each year as a direct result of those infections. Many more
people die from other conditions that were complicated by an
antibiotic-resistant infection.
Worse, the overuse of antibiotics in factory farms in the
United States and the widespread and uncontrolled use of antibiotics in the
less developed world is likely to make this problem steadily worse.
True, there are efforts to develop new antibiotics and some
of that research may pay off.
But many of these new drugs, have dreadful side effects and
once they are used often, they too will tend to stop working.
C. Cures for antibiotic bacteria available NOW
The older and original antibiotics worked and had
predictable effects on infectious bacteria with not that many side effects.
What if we could still kill antibiotic resistant bacteria
with them now? What if we could boost
the capacity of the people sick with such bacteria to survive the assault while
we killed the bacteria?
The potentially good news is that we can do both those
things.
These methods are not now in wide use.
But there is a place that experiences such high direct costs
now from fighting antibiotic resistant bacteria, they might be willing to try
these methods when others don’t have enough motivation.
That place is the hospital!
So, it’s my hope that these existing methods in combination
will cure people and do so enough faster that the hospitals who test them will
get such good results, other hospitals will adopt them. Then most people who need them will have
access to them.
We now know 8 ways to fight antibiotic resistant bacteria
with no new antibiotics needed!
The process is like a double check in chess. The bacteria can resist one kind of
attack. But when you start hitting it
with two or more kinds at the same time, it dies!
1. The first one I
found out about is silver. There WAS a
study reported in MNT that found that silver given patients with bacteria
having multiple antibiotic resistant bacteria along with safe, now inexpensive,
and once effective antibiotics allowed them to work! The bacteria could fight the silver which was
only moderately effective by itself. And
they had learned to fight the antibiotic.
But just like a double check in chess they could NOT do both at once!
2. This article
quotes results showing that adding thyme oil, carvacol, and lavender oil also
does this though perhaps not as effectively as silver.
It certainly looks as if adding those to the antibiotics
that used to work plus silver might even work with MRSA that is killing a
patient or for antibiotic resistant gonorrhea or TB.
3. Intravenous
vitamin C HAS been shown to be effective against some cancers. It may also be effective when fighting MRSA
that is killing a patient or for antibiotic resistant gonorrhea or TB where a
faster cure is wanted.
4. Intravenous
glutathione may boost the patient's immune systems and ability to survive and
recover from the attack. According to Dr Perlmutter who tested it on his
patients, it DOES do so.
5. For people low in
vitamin D3, 50,000 iu a day until the people test at 50 or above and 5,000 to
10,000 a day has also been shown to boost the patient's immune systems and
ability to survive and recovery from the attack for both physical injuries and
viral and bacterial infections.
As just one example, a Scandavian study found in an epidemic
of a virulent flu that killed a number of people, it killed people seriously
deficient in blood levels of vitamin D3 and almost no one with desirable
levels.
6. Taking astragulus
may also have this kind of effect. But
that research is less for sure than those two are and the effect may be lower.
7. For C Diff, having
the patient drink a drink they like that's sweet and use TONS of sucralose
first which has been found to kill almost all gut bacteria indiscriminately may
well work to help kill the C Diff from yet another direction with great force. Adding that to these other methods will
likely cause it to be eliminated.
8. Then the injection
of the cleaned bacteria from the colon of a healthy person that has been tested
to work is but less obnoxious and faster than a whole load of the stuff,
restarts things and taking two kinds of probiotics three times a day for 3
weeks and then once a day after that would finish the job.
1 Comments:
(Does a way to kill antibiotic resistant bacteria exist that can work by itself or boost antibiotics by attacking the antibiotic resistant bacteria another way?)
An email I get from Jenny Thompson had this:
" ....not only does it exist, it's also 100% effective. It even kills the superbugs that antibiotic resistance created.
This medical marvel is intravenous vitamin C (IVC) -- also known as intravenous ascorbic acid (IAA).
Here's Dr. Spreen's take on it...
"It's been shown (decades ago) that there are no bacteria or viruses that can stand up to a high dose IVC. It kills ALL invading bacteria if the dose is high enough. That dose can be reached by any competent practitioner."
Of course, for most of us, IVC isn't as practical as taking a round of pills. But that's not necessarily the case for hospitalized patients. And hospitals are the front line of the worst superbugs."
& (Is there a tested protocol available to do this?)
"So if you're scheduled for a procedure that requires antibiotics -- or end up with a superbug after a procedure -- discuss using IVC with your doctor. You can get things started with a checklist for getting IVC in the hospital at DoctorYourself.Com. The list guides you through the whole process. "
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