Rational antibacterial drug warning: safeguarding health, careful use of antibacterial blades


In the scenes of medical and daily life, anti-bacterial drugs are often seen as a “life-saving straw” against bacterial infections, but if the blade is not used properly, not only will it not be able to remove the pain, but it will become a “blade” to break the health-protection net, posing many challenges to the treatment process. It is therefore urgent that the alarm be sounded for the rational use of medicines. Drug-resistant crisis: Misuse of antibacterial drugs that induce the creation of “superbacterial” antibacterial drugs that act on specific target points for bacteria and inhibit or kill bacteria for therapeutic purposes. However, once abused, the bacteria become “moral” mutations under the “life or death test”, mutations of genes or the ingestion of drug-resistant genes from other bacteria into a strain of drug-resistant bacteria. Like MRSA, antibacterials such as the common penicillin, the hairstretch generation, “absorption with a knife”, in hospital wards, where the server causes serious diseases such as injury infections, pneumonia, sepsis, and so forth, the difficulty of treatment rises straight, and it is necessary to use expensive and more side-effect second- and third-line drugs to prolong hospitalization, increase the burden of medical treatment, and even fall into a medically unfeasible situation, making otherwise controlled infections a lethal threat. The human body is a micro-organism, a symbiotic kingdom, where the intestinal, skin, respiratory and other parts of the fungus coexist in harmony. Antibacterial “no-differentiated attack”, where innocent “infections” are beneficial when killing the fungi. In the case of intestine, the chronic abuse of antibacterial drugs, “probative guards” such as cobblebacterium, lactacibacterium, and so on, has been drastically reduced, while the hard-to-feed strains have been reduced by a lack of counterbalances, widespread proliferation, the release of toxins, diarrhea, pseudo-film entericitis, abdominal stings and frequent running of toilets for patients, which have seriously affected the quality of life, and the subsequent repair of intestinal strains requires the supplementation of the probative bacteria, the adjustment of diets, and a lengthy process to rebalance. Adverse effects: The “one-line” antibacterials of drugs and poison are not absolutely safe and the unreasonable use of antibacterials often triggers adverse reactions. Common allergies, pre-skin tests for penicillin, instant contact with an allergic person, skin rashes, itching difficulties, respiratory oedema causing respiratory difficulties and severe allergy shock to life; aminomal sugars such as Quintan, excessive use of impaired hearing, kidney function, ringing in the ear, deafness, failure of the kidney “detoxification plant”, abnormal rise in acetic anhydride, urea nitrogen indicators and chronic kidney disease; chloroquinin use of inappropriate inhibition of blood function, causing anaemia, reduction in white cells, increased developmental and foetal health effects for specific groups such as children, pregnant women, and high risk of walking through “steels”. The correct use of “medicines”: medically prescribed, strictly self-regulated anti-bacterial drugs, patients must comply with medical instructions, not “broad guesses”, buy their own drugs, and do not increase, shorten or prolong the treatment at will. The medical prescriptions are based on a medically accurate choice of the drug, and the “target-to-face” sensitive drug is targeted through bacterium culture, drug-sensitive tests, which can be applied in narrow spectrum, without broad spectrum, with low-level, low-level, high-level, and full-scale monitoring of efficacy and adverse effects. The public needs to move away from the “anti-bacterial almighty” misconception of “inflammating drugs for health” and to perform daily personal hygiene, enhance immunity, and make antibacterial drugs on a rationally regulated track to be truly a guardian of health rather than a “disrupting” of health. Only medical and medical personnel, working together and using scientific drugs, can build a firm line of defence on the antibacterial road against bacteria “invasive attacks”.