What does antibiotic resistance look like? Watch this experiment.
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- čas přidán 20. 04. 2019
- Americans are among the highest consumers of antibiotics in the world. To see why that's a problem, watch this experiment in which bacteria are dropped into a solution containing a potent, broad-spectrum antibiotic ... and survive. See the full report here: cbsn.ws/2IACGrt
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This is a great short and simple video on a serious issue in healthcare. The growing rate of antibiotic resistance is alarming, and we don’t have many viable alternatives. It’s sobering to see how even the highest dose of antibiotics, much higher than you would prescribe a patient, still doesn’t stop the spread of resistant E. coli in this experiment. As a medical student and future doctor, I am wary of the risk posed by over-prescribing antibiotics, and patients taking them incorrectly. I also realize that, even when everyone does everything correctly and as medically indicated, we’re still breeding super bugs. As a patient, though, with a history of serious medical conditions, I’ve also had many frustrating appointments when I was unable to get the antibiotics and was sick longer than necessary, sometimes dangerously so. With Americans being the biggest consumer of antibiotics in the world we obviously have an overuse issue, but I also don’t think under-prescribing is the answer. From personal experience, I believe that better communication and physician access could go a long way toward mitigating this issue. Many common colds are viral, and so antibiotics aren’t indicated, and illness will likely play out in several days. However, it might also be bacterial, and an a well prescribed antibiotic can alleviate a potentially serious illness. Oftentimes it’s impossible or impractical to tell which, and doctors will default toward assuming it’s a virus and sending you on your way. This would be fine if you as the patient could simply call back in three days and get an appropriate antibiotic prescription phoned in if symptoms persist. However, many providers require you to come back to the office for a reevaluation, which means additional scheduling, waiting, copays, and still no guarantee of resolution. On the other hand, some doctors may unnecessarily prescribe an antibiotic “just in case”, in order to save the patient the potential hassle of another appointment. At the end of the day, medicine is personal, and individual judgements need to be made on a case-by-case basis by empathetic, educated doctors. Health care providers should also work to make sure patients are educated on different pathogens, disease processes, and the proper application of antibiotics. I’m not saying this doesn’t happen already, but oftentimes it can come across as unsympathetic or demeaning to the patient’s intelligence. The governing principle of beneficence dictates that we do the best we can for our patients and treat them with respect. As a doctor I plan to stay educated on this subject, and hope that I can use sound judgement in my antibiotic prescriptions. I also will keep informed about newer options going forward as medical science is constantly evolving.
bro. calm down.
@@RationalPea😂💀
RN here, please add human nutrition to your studies beyond the Vitamin K injection in neonates. Thank-you for your dedication to quality of human life.
bro made an essay
I'm suprised no one else was wondering why, she's not in lab gear, or at the very least, have gloves on.
I just said this😂
Because she's entitled elite journalist
Because e-coli is everywhere . You probably came into contact with some today.
@@TasmanianTigerGrrr thinking like that is how corona happened 😂
@@TasmanianTigerGrrr Yes, but they are not resist to 1000X dose of an antibiotics. This mutant if it comes in contact with the body can cause serious harm.
Wow, it is amazing that these ecoli were able to develop resistance within less than 12 days.
They didn’t. This is not how it works. In a group of 10 million bacteria there are a few of them who are already resistant. All the others die immediately. The resistant bacteria remain and multiply. In your body your immune system fights antibiotic resistant bacteria just as easily as normal bacteria. So when you take an antibiotic that kills 99% of non resistant bacteria the 1% that remains is killed by your immune system like nothing. Problems arise when you have a large enough group of antibiotic resistant bacteria in your body, your immune system might not be able to fight it quickly enough.
@@Johanjames1very well explained, thank you!
I just don't understand how a Harvard scientest allowed her in the lab with no protective equipment on, espcially during an experiment with bacteria.
because e coli, which populates the human digestive tract, is not an air-borne pathogen, so masks do not matter. It is considered a BL-1 (biosafety level), the lowest level. Working with e coli is generally not dangerous. A visitor should not touch or ingest the e coli.
Not all hunting accidents are accidental
It may have been a harmless strain of e coli but I agree
Blame it on all the businesses who put antibiotics in all the animal feed in order for them to make an extra .50 cents.
dude 50 cents times billions adds up... you can't really blame capitalists for being capitalists, you blame consumers for ignorantly purchasing. just my opinion though.
Blame it on ignorant consumers using antibiotics as an everyday cure-all and not the last resort drug that it should be
@@calebdouglas2512 And people who don't take it long enough to ensure all the bugs are dead. They stop too soon, leaving possible mutants to keep on spreading.
@@snaplash precisely
Yup... I don't understand how people blame consumers... like most of the damage was done by these businesses, not consumers.
I seen a video where bacteria hides from an antibiotic, That small microorganism is smarter than all my neurons combined💀
And yet.... we still have MDs prescribing antibiotics for the common cold.
"The world will not be destroyed by those who do evil, but by those who watch them without doing anything."
- Albert Einstein
Yes. You will be hated for speaking up, that is for sure.
@@barywilliams3653 what happened now?
It will be destroyed by these 2
Don't touch it lol
"this is mutant antibiotic resistant bacteria"
*is near it with no masks or gloves*
@@followmaslow Yeah its kinda surreal especially in modern pandemic times.
Decolonial futures dot net
Excellent , solve a huge infection so quick, but can also bring serious side effects ! Cannot be use without prescription and medical supervision.
Extremely worried about this... 12 antibiotics in less than a year , they change the antibiotics class here and there, have had a chest infection for over a month and now a sinus infection and the sinus infection is not going away with the z pak... I'm constantly getting infections. Idk what to do anymore 😭😭😭 now I think I'll die if I'm resistant
Your alive honey😢
@@gamerman9426 I am alive lol
@@gamerman9426 suprisingly
@@melissabrill8367 best of my regards to you hope you get well ❤️
How are you feeling? Did you recover ?
See that, creationists? Evolution. In only twelve freaking days!
They’d still find a way to ignore even this overwhelming evidence.
Yeah but most of the -antibiotics abuse is in our farm meat industry about 80% or higher so where is that brought up in this report cbs?
They are talking about HUMAN prescribed antibiotics
user2point0 initial trials of any drug including and especially antibiotics start in animals so does organism mutation for resistance
08FayFay over prescribed medicine towards humans is still a big reason why antibiotics are becoming less useful
user2point0 the bigger picture is organisms mutate big pharm wants to make big money the western model of medicine calls for a pill for everything in addition healthcare providers don’t want to be sued🌺peace
@@08FayFay
Antibiotic test animals don't end on your food plate.
Why she reaching over it without gloves😂
Its isolated in glass case u fkin noob 😂😂
Bacteriophages are an upcoming alternatives of antibiotic resistance bacteria. I am personally using bacteriophages for my chronic infection and my reports are getting better. Most of us dont have knowledge of bacteriophages as it is confined to Russia and Georgia area and yeah after ww2 antibiotic paced up due to its broad spectrum effect
Is not confined to Russia. It has been studied in many other countries around the world! So you are wrong about that.
Phage cure is also available in EU (Poland). Anyway while phages are useful to fight bacteria, they are not the panacea. Phages are just one of the many weapon in the antimicrobial arsenal to fight bacteria. Said that there are some bacteria that becomes resistant to phages by simply modifying the cell surface receptors in order to make it unrecognizable not letting the phage to attach it or developing enzymes through genetic mutation (like drugs) that degrade phage DNA making it harmless. Anwyay the huge problems of using phages on large scale perspective are: extremely high costs, difficult production method and (last but not least) quality control. Which becomes problematic for a large scale production considering it's a cure/solution far beyond from perfection. And we have no studies about interactions that could affects on the long run. As of today, due to these limitations, phage therapy may only be suitable for specific cases, like yours, and not be universally applicable which would be unsustainable economically and medically speaking.
what happen when the bacteria develop the gene to fight back the virus?
Creationists have been really quiet since this dropped.
What?😂.. What does this prove? It just shows that bacteria adapted to live in a certain environment.. It didn't become a whole different specie, so it doesn't prove anything monkey man!
Do you guys wandered where did they put it away?
They burn it in extreme heat
Antibiotics: Some bacteria think they can outsmart me. Maybe. Maybe.
I have yet to see one that can outsmart an autoclave set to 132 degrees Celsius.
@@ennui9745lololol if you see them wearing microscopic fire suit, then you know we're f*cked!
Strep throat and the clap is all ive ever needed em for.
I'm 33 and never had an antibiotic in my life.
Obviously you have antibiotic resistance.
How much of a risk does the new X-Men strength E. coli pose to the general public? I imagine some disgruntled employee throwing the experiment out a window into a street instead of chucking it into an incinerator. Super E. coli would be a messy way to die.
Well what do you do when you have certain bacterial infections such as sinus infections? Because it seems like they will never go away on their own
Mystical, every action has an equal and opposite reaction, for sinus is concerned might need to spray insect spray in the room and let it though while staying in the room for mosquitoes, breathing through the lungs too should help, and stay indoors in case you get drowsy, and a have pain killer on stand-by for a headache, and most importantly do not forget to eat well and exercise or engage in any physical activity for the immune system! One thing anyone could forget is mouth digestion, hence is the most important phase of the meal, preferred when eating meals without salt before and after the salty meal; most medicines are gland triggers, and spicy foods may diverge the medication process, oil preserves the medication till drained in the toilet just after the Second meal of the day! I guess it's all about meal and medication discipline, and no medication can work if the body is hungry therfore digested as a meal, hunger can scramble every process, and if money for food is the problem do lesser physical activity. Where there's a will there's a way but not when fooling the life of oneself while I'll, might get chronic! It's all on the palm.
the bacteria don't "figure out" how to survive the antibiotic...
Hey
How do they get rid of the mutatant e coli?
by creating another stronger anti biotics. and bacteria mutate again
The most likely answer is with bleach. A high concentration of it. Bleach is capable of destroying almost anything alive. Bleach does so much differently than antibiotics do. You can't take bleach into your body because it is far too caustic and therefore deadly. Resistance to bleach is almost unheard of right now. Bleach destroys the cell wall by dissolving it and then rapidly destroys everything left through powerful oxidation and denaturation. Oxidation denaturation at that level is simply million of millions of times stronger than their 1000x antibotics column. It causes the proteins to bunch together and end up useless www.livescience.com/3069-bleach-kills-bacteria.html
phys.org/news/2008-11-household-bacteria.html
CRISPR technology
With another antibiotic which is more broad spectrum sometimes. But bacteria once killed by that abx can develop resistence again. That is how clever there cells can be
They can boil the whole solution and reset e.coli bacteria evolution back to where it all started.
Stand Name: Gold Experience Requiem
If you're in the critical care of a hospital and have drug resistant bacterial infections, you'll likely be prescribed the last resort antibiotic, the king of antibiotics made by Japanese pharma Shionogi & Co. called _cefiderocol_ (Fetroja). If that doesn't work, good luck to you!
How can we get it
Incorrect
When health care professionals suspect and confirm multi antibiotic resistant bacteria,they usually prescribe Antibiotics from the Carbapenem class
If that fails,there's a second one even more powerful that can be administered
Antibiotics resistance is no joke and should promptly be treated before it escalates.
0:47
There's no reason why the mold that makes antibiotics cannot also adjust and become stronger. If evolution works for one side of the spectrum then there's a way it works for both. I have no doubt we'll win the race to stop antibacterial resistance, maybe Penicillin will evolve and give us an assist. I love watching stuff like this.
That actually makes sense. But why not just use natural antiseptics that virtually no pathogens can develop full resistance to like peroxide, vinegar, permanganate, hypochlorous acid, iodine ..
Absolutely, given time the ciprofloxacin could become the killer disease, while the ecoli could also become the less harmful antibiotic,
The issue, is what happens to us relying on the antibiotic in the meantime, and how long that meantime could be...
@@PeaceNinja007I have resistant UTI , should I drink vinegar with water?
You have a very interesting but simplistic thought. E.Coli doubling time in optimal conditions is ~20 mins while the mold that produces penicilin needs 3 - 7 days for one life cycle. Statistically, bacteria will win the lottery.
@@PeaceNinja007good luck injecting that into your blood stream and not die
For the treatment finders, be sure of your philosophy followed, for pure treatment purposes either by process or fast treatment for the modern finds or by business pharmaceutical principle of y'know that thing that money matters can do for the prolong thing.
just use more antiobiotics.
they will adapt.
@@aguywhodoesstuff1116 just use more antibiotics
@@Razor1473 I see that this is a positive feedback loop.
Yea .. just keep using more and more antibiotics until you wipe out your immune system.
What could possibly go wrong?
Moonshine kills
Cipro has very serious side effects. Id avoiding it for all cost.
her finger hovering above ecoli making me maddddddddd nervous
Garlic 🧄🧄🧄🧄🧄🧄🧄🧄🧄
The earth lives too.If your on the earth surface and you become an irritant the earth will rid itself of you.Its simple.
Do you know that 2.5 lbs. of your adult body is germs and parasites.Without them you would have no immune system.
omg your body is an antibiotic... good grief.
Fyi evolution and mutation are different
But are related
The reason is is because Cipro doesn't work. I tried that antibiotic
Why are you not wearing gloves ?
Anyone here because of Mrs. Whittaker?
@unknown Still using the same video for 3 years? If it ain't broke...
@@fiammaorsmth9840 don’t fix it
Until recently, I though it was a slow process. Nope.
This s**t is real!
😢😢😢😢
Anti biotetik equal to antilife.
Yow gen-sci
Unfortunately, after breathing in the mutated bacteria the doctor reporter in this story... got into a.....hot spicy ilicit relationship...lolol
West Virginians poured moonshine on that table ecoli died in seconds 😅😂
They should push it to 50,000 not 1,000 like this 1.
Self made
We are the third largest country, so having more cases and prescriptions would make sense. However, some other countries do not track or even require prescriptions for antibiotics. The validity of the story is questionable.
Many countries do track and it's measured by a Defined Daily Dose (DDD) per 1000 inhabitants per day, so the size of the country is irrelevant.
“Americans #1 consumers of antibiotics in the world”... well considering the population size when comparing America (50 states in one) to 1 state it makes perfect sense. Nothing shocking... 🙄
Most likely it has been counted per capita.
Land mass doesn't correlate to population though...
China has double the inhabitants than the USA, on a much smaller landmass. So even if it's not per capita as the other guy said, but in total, it is kind of alarming.
Irrelevant. It's measured by a Defined Daily Dose (DDD) per 1000 inhabitants per day. Size of a city, country or continent is completely irrelevant.
I think You should waer gloves and mask
What's the black media called?
Looks like Dr pepper
BET
Just watched the new one today, nice that you show what's a matter but u don't do a dam thing to fix it, after u get ur views, disstafied in all show and not even a try to fix it after ur clip is over, just keep milking it, because as far as I see that's all ur good for, look at the time this video came out and they just milked it again tonight on 60 minutes and r gonna milk it again and not do a dam thing there a mess and a sham, they don't care about fixing anything except there rating, too dam sad
Thank you, Americans. Big world polluters, violent government worldwide and irresponsible with medicines, oh, and the dollar they print to pay their bills while other countries with usd debt have to earn to pay their debt