Marc Lappé (1943–2005)
Autor von Against the Grain: Biotechnology and the Corporate Takeover of Your Food
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Werke von Marc Lappé
Engineering the Farm: The Social and Ethical Aspects of Agricultural Biotechnology (2002) 6 Exemplare
Ethical and scientific issues posed by human uses of molecular genetics : [papers] (1976) 1 Exemplar
Engineering the Farm: The Social And Ethical Aspects Of Agricultural Biotechnology (2013) 1 Exemplar
Broken Code: the Exploitation of Dna 1 Exemplar
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- Lappé, Marc
- Geburtstag
- 1943-01-14
- Todestag
- 2005-05-21
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A broad-spectrum antibiotic, like penicillin, might kill most of an infection. Some tiny portion of the surviving infection will suddenly acquire a resistance to penicillin. When it comes back, or is passed to someone else, the doctor will have to try some other antibiotic, which may or my not help at all. That same broad-spectrum antibiotic might kill some of the "good" bacteria living in your intestines, allowing "bad" bacteria free rein to cause havoc.
Approximately three to four percent of hospital patients will get a nosocomial infection (an infection gotten while in the hospital). No doubt, that infection has mutated more than once, and is resistant to several, or all, antibiotics. Hospitals need to do a better job in ensuring that instruments, catheter tubes and doctor's hands are properly cleaned or sterilized ahead of time. It seems to be standard hospital practice to give all new patients a shot of broad-spectrum antibiotics, regardless of their infection. This is done without medical testing to see if a different antibiotic is "made" for that infection. This can only increase the spread of antibiotic-resistant infection.
Giving antibiotics to animals as part of their daily care is another potentially big source of antibiotic-resistant infection. The drugs are not given when an animal is not well, but as part of their daily feeding. Another big problem is the average primary care physician prescribing antibiotics much too often, even for things like acne or the sniffles. Eventually, all antibiotics will be useless, after a person's infection builds up resistance to them.
Ignore the year that this book was published; it is still a really interesting book. It shows that overuse of antibiotics is not a new phenomenon. This is a good book to read to get some background on the subject.… (mehr)