Stop misusing antibacterials! Did you get caught in these mistakes?

In the healthy “fields of war” of daily life, antibacterials are often seen as “hard” to fight disease, but because of lack of awareness and misperceptions, the general public is often caught in many faults, not only in their use of antibacterials, but also in their use as “enemy” but also in their health.

Mistake One: Think of the antibacterials as “the potion of all powers” and use them without symptoms.

The first reaction of many people is to flip out of their home antibacterials, “twisting two pieces of pressure”, and it is unknown that most of the flu and flu are caused by viruses, such as nasal viruses and influenza viruses, which ravage human respiratory tracts, with no “place of use” for antibacterials, because antibacterials work primarily against bacteria and do nothing about viruses. Blind administration not only delays self-healing, but also disrupts the normal balance of the fungus in the body, causing damage to the intestinal, respiratory and otherwise harmonious symbiotic fungus, weakening the body’s own immunity and “opening the door” for subsequent bacterial infections, which complicates and makes simple conditions more costly.

Mistake II: Any increase or decrease in the dosage, and no medical treatment.

Some patients are anxious, feel that the conventional dosage is “not strong enough”, increase their antibacterial use without permission and expect to click quickly on the fungi. However, overdoses can overburden the body, especially the liver and kidney, which are responsible for metabolism, excretion drugs, overdose molecules “split across” the organs, and can trigger toxic side effects such as increased aminoase and abnormal kidney function indicators, which accumulate over time and even cause irreversible damage. On the contrary, the adverse reaction of other people to unconscionable drugs, which are self-reducing, appears to be “precautionary”, effectively prevents the drug from reaching effective antibacterial or antibacterial concentrations in the body, and the fungi continues to reproduce under “low pressure”, the infection continues unabated, the infection is incorruptible, and it may lead to the creation of resistant strains that make subsequent treatment difficult.

Mistake III: Detoxification as soon as the symptoms are mitigated and the treatment process is “missed half-way”.

Antibacterial treatment is like a long-lasting battle with the fungi and must follow a full course of treatment in order to “cut the roots” of bacteria. After a few days of taking the drug, the fever is gone, the cough is light, the pain is eased, and many people are dying to stop, but the fungus may be “dressed down” and there are still parts of the bacteria in the body that, once the drug is stopped, they “returned” and they go through the drug “baptized”, and the resistance increases dramatically, and the difficulty of re-treatment increases. In the case of the treatment of urin infections, for example, left-oxen salsa is subject to 7 – 14 days of treatment, with early interruptions and a high risk of re-emergence of pathogenic bacteria, such as coliform, which leads to repeated cases and re-exercise and prolonged treatment.

Error four: Frequent replacement of antibacterials in pursuit of “quick effect”.

In the treatment, if the efficacy of the drug does not appear as quickly as expected, it is impossible to hold back and replace the various types of antibacterials over and over a short period of time in an attempt to find the “quick effect heart-saving pill”. But each antibacterial drug is effective for a certain period of time, with frequent changes that keep bacteria exposed to different “means of attack” and make it difficult to create a stable environment of resistance, which makes it easier to cause bacterial genes to mutate and to create resistance; at the same time, the risk of a combination of adverse effects, such as gastrointestinal discomfort, allergies, etc., increases the complexity of otherwise simple treatments, adding to the body’s body.

Error five: Sharing antibacterials, ignoring individual differences. Similar symptoms occur among family and friends and, out of good will, they are often shared with antibacterials that have been used by themselves, but each person has a different age, weight, health condition, allergy history, and a different type of infection and drug sensitivity. The deterioration of the liver and kidney function of the elderly, the early development of the child’s organs, and the special requirements for drug metabolism and tolerance; the “life-saving medicine” of others may have serious allergies, liver and kidney damage and other negative consequences on you, which may seem sweet, but conceal a health crisis.

The use of antibacterials is not a play. It is only by abandoning these faults, following medical instructions and using scientific drugs, that antibacterial drugs can truly become a “solar instrument” to protect health, rather than a “disturbation” to cause harm. In case of doubt, consult with professional pharmacists and doctors in a timely manner and establish secure lines of medication for themselves and their families.