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Dr. Arjun Srinivasan: We’ve Reached “The End of Antibiotics, Period”


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http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/health-science-technology/hunting-the-nightmare-bacteria/dr-arjun-srinivasan-weve-reached-the-end-of-antibiotics-period/

 

Explain to me why the discovery of antibiotics was so important for medicine.

 

Antibiotics were one of [the most], if not the most, transformational discoveries in all of medicine. Infections are something that we struggled to treat for many, many years, for centuries before the advent of antibiotics, and infections were a major cause of death before the advent of antibiotics.

So with the discovery of this new class of drugs, we overnight had an ability to care for people and offer them not just a treatment but a cure for an illness that previously would have taken their lives in a rapid manner. …

 

 

They really are miracle drugs, and not only have they saved the lives of millions and millions of people … but antibiotics have opened up new frontiers in medicine that would be impossible without them.

 

Like what?

 

For example, organ transplantation. One of the major causes of death in patients who would have an organ transplant would be an infection. Without antibiotics, we wouldn’t be able to treat any of those infections.

 

And stem cell?

 

Stem cell transplants, bone marrow transplantation, cancer chemotherapy would be largely impossible … because all of these are therapies that weaken people’s immune system, which of course makes them then vulnerable to infections. We don’t have to worry about that so much because we have antibiotics that can treat those infections.

 

 

A lot of the therapies that we use now for different types of arthritis, like rheumatoid arthritis — you see ads for that now on television — again, these are therapies that weaken immune systems. They make people vulnerable for infections, but because we have antibiotics, that’s not something that we have to particularly worry about as much as if we didn’t have the antibiotics.

 

 

So they have really transformed the practice of medicine, perhaps unlike any other drug that’s available to us.

 

 

…How does resistance work, and why is it a problem?

 

 

Bacteria, like any living organism, want to survive. They are adapted that way, and any successful bacteria is the bacteria that’s most able to survive in the environment. So bacterial resistance is largely inevitable, because bacteria will always change in order to survive.

 

 

So anything that we do to try and kill bacteria, or anything the environment does to try and kill bacteria, bacteria will eventually discover ways or find ways around those.

 

 

It’s important to know that this is a phenomenon that plays out in nature. Most of the antibiotics that we have available to us now were derived from products in nature. So penicillin was an agent that was excreted by molds in order to kill bacteria. Eventually bacteria will evolve, and they’ll adapt ways around that to overcome that obstacle.

 

 

There are lots of bacteria. They have the advantage on us in terms of numbers. And whenever you have that many of an organism, it’s likely that one among them will be resistant to an antibiotic.

If you use an antibiotic, then that one among the group that is resistant becomes the predominant one. So resistance is something that is an inevitable consequence of bacterial evolution. But it’s also something that we have certainly helped along the way.

 

 

We’ve helped it?

 

 

We’ve helped it, absolutely, by the overuse and the misuse of antibiotics, and this is something I think that we have to own up to. We’ve fueled this fire of bacterial resistance.

 

 

These drugs are miracle drugs, these antibiotics that we have, but we haven’t taken good care of them over the 50 years that we’ve had them.

 

 

So why is it a problem?

 

 

The more you use an antibiotic, the more you expose a bacteria to an antibiotic, the greater the likelihood that resistance to that antibiotic is going to develop. So the more antibiotics we put into people, we put into the environment, we put into livestock, the more opportunities we create for these bacteria to become resistant. …We also know that we’ve greatly overused antibiotics and in overusing these antibiotics, we have set ourselves up for the scenario that we find ourselves in now, where we’re running out of antibiotics.

 

 

We are quickly running out of therapies to treat some of these infections that previously had been eminently treatable. There are bacteria that we encounter, particularly in health-care settings, that are resistant to nearly all — or, in some cases, all — the antibiotics that we have available to us, and we are thus entering an era that people have talked about for a long time.

 

 

For a long time, there have been newspaper stories and covers of magazines that talked about “The end of antibiotics, question mark?” Well, now I would say you can change the title to “The end of antibiotics, period.”

 

 

We’re here. We’re in the post-antibiotic era. There are patients for whom we have no therapy, and we are literally in a position of having a patient in a bed who has an infection, something that five years ago even we could have treated, but now we can’t. …

 

 

…I wonder if you can reflect a little bit and describe how the MRSA phenomenon, this resistant bacteria, changed public awareness about the problem.

 

 

So methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, for a lot of people is the first time that they had really encountered one of these highly drug-resistant bacteria. …

 

 

Literally for decades it’s been something that’s been difficult to treat. There were, up until recently, limited treatment options for MRSA. There is really one antibiotic that was available to treat it.

 

 

Was it that bad? Did people die from it?

 

 

People did die from it. It caused very serious infections. … MRSA was something that if you asked any doctor or nurse about MRSA, they would tell you, “Oh, yes, it’s a very serious issue. We struggle with it in our patients, in our intensive care units,” but if you asked the average person outside of hospitals about MRSA, they probably would never have heard of it. That all changed maybe about a decade or so ago.

 

 

What changed?

 

 

We began seeing MRSA infections outside of health-care settings. …

 

We were seeing it in young people who were athletes, who were young football players who had serious infections, who died of these MRSA infections which had previously been limited to hospitals.

 

 

We saw outbreaks in schools. We saw outbreaks in health clubs. And what most of these people were getting was something very different from what we saw in hospitals.

 

How?

 

 

In hospitals, when you see MRSA infections, you oftentimes see that in patients who have a catheter in their blood, and that creates an opportunity for MRSA to get into their bloodstream. They’re on a ventilator, so they have a tube that’s in their lungs, and it creates an opportunity for MRSA to get into their lungs. …

 

In the community, it was causing a very different type of infection. It was causing a lot of very, very serious and painful infections of the skin, which was completely different from what we would see in health care.

 

 

What’s very interesting is that we now know that what happened here was not that MRSA escaped from the hospital and began causing infections in the community. The MRSA in the community was a completely different type of organism, or Staph aureus, that evolved this resistance to methicillin, to these drugs that we used to treat it. …

 

 

So when MRSA showed up in the community, was there a lesson from that?

 

 

There were a few lessons that we learned from the MRSA emerging as a community pathogen. One is the fact that despite what we knew in health care about drug resistance and antibiotic resistance, we hadn’t done a great job of educating people about how serious the problem was, because there were a lot of people for whom this was the very first time they were encountering this

phenomenon. …

 

 

The other thing we learned, of course, is that these highly drug-resistant pathogens that we had for a long time thought were really an issue limited to hospitals and health care didn’t have to stay there. And in retrospect, it makes obvious sense that bacteria don’t respect any border. They don’t respect the door of the hospital, and so it makes sense that we could encounter these types of resistant infections outside of our hospitals and health care settings. …

 

 

… In the last decade, there have been some other developments, especially with Gram negatives. Can you describe for me a little bit about what happened there with Gram negatives and why was that important and dangerous? …

 

 

The issue with Gram negatives that I think is really important is that the Gram-negative bacteria are a large group of bacteria that generally do a very good job of developing resistance to antibiotics. …

 

 

What do you mean?

 

 

A lot of Gram-negative bacteria, they come out of the box, if you will, resistant to a number of important antibiotics that we might use to treat them. We’re talking about agents with names like Acinetobacter, Pseudomonas, E. coli.

 

 

These are bacteria that have historically done a very good job of very quickly developing resistance to antibiotics. They have a lot of tricks up their sleeves for developing resistance to antibiotics, so they’re a group of agents that can quickly become resistant, can pose major challenges to resistance.

 

 

And what we’ve seen over the past decade is these Gram-negative agents becoming very rapidly more and more resistant to all of the agents that we have available to treat them.

 

 

To all of the agents?

 

 

There are Gram-negative bacteria that have developed resistance to everything, for which we have no viable antibiotics left to treat them. …

 

 

So why are we so worried about these new bacteria that are Gram negatives, and what’s happened recently?

 

 

…For a long time we’ve seen Gram negatives develop resistance to antibiotics, but we had other tricks up our sleeves. We had other antibiotics that we could use.

 

 

Increasingly, though, what we’ve seen is that they’re developing resistance even to the agents that we’ve been sort of holding back and only using in the most serious infections. They were our last, best line of defense, and we now see some of these Gram-negative organisms that are resistant to even that last line of defense.

 

 

What that means is that we’ve had to actually reach back into the archives, if you will. We’ve had to dust off the shelves [and revisit] some older antibiotics that we haven’t used in many, many years. We stopped using them because they were very toxic, and as new antibiotics came about that weren’t so toxic, we of course stopped using these older antibiotics.

 

 

Like colistin?

 

 

Colistin is a great example. And now we’re back. We’re using a lot of colistin, and we’re using more of it every year. It’s very toxic. We don’t like to use it. It damages the kidneys. But we’re forced to use it in a lot of instances.

 

 

But what’s really worrisome is that now we’re seeing bacteria that are resistant even to colistin, so there are infections for which we have really nothing to offer a patient. We’re in a situation where the patient will get better or the patient won’t get better based on whatever the defenses the patient might have, but we have nothing to offer them to help them get better.

 

 

… What are [the bacteria] doing? Are they hiding? Are they destroying? What are the weapons that bacteria have to fight the miracle drugs?

 

 

Bacteria have a lot of weapons that they can use to fight off antibiotics. One of the most common ways that they fight off antibiotics is actually just destroying them. They develop what we call enzymes, which is a fancy word for saying something that can chew up, so we put the antibiotic in, and the bacteria produces a chemical that chews it up. It destroys the antibiotic. The antibiotic becomes ineffective.

 

 

The bacteria are surrounded by a wall. They can change that wall in different ways to even prevent the antibiotics from ever getting in in the first place.

 

 

Bacteria also have ways that they can pump the antibiotics out, so even if we can get them past the wall and get them past the chemicals that would chew them up, the bacteria then turns around and just pumps them right back out again.

 

 

And many bacteria have more than one of these weapons simultaneously.

 

 

…Gram negatives have all of these weapons at their disposal, and many of the highly resistant Gram negatives that we see have all of these weapons at once that they’re using.

…What’s concerning is that what we also see with Gram negatives is that they are able to pick up weapons from their neighbors, if you will.

 

 

I don’t understand

 

 

Resistance, some of these weapons, are carried, if you will, by genes, so the gene is what tells the bacteria how to make the weapon. Some of these genes are now carried on little pieces of DNA that are very movable between one bacteria and another.

 

 

What we’ve seen is that one particular bacteria will develop resistance. It will put that resistance gene onto a little piece of DNA, and it might put a whole bunch of different weapons onto a little piece of DNA. So now you’ve got one piece of DNA that has the code for several of these resistance weapons, these genes, and that can be moved to a different bacteria. …

 

 

Let’s talk a little bit about the antibiotics themselves, the drugs. What’s different today from the ’60s and ’70s with the drugs?

 

 

We’ve done a lot with antibiotic development since the very first antibiotics were discovered. We have antibiotics that are very nontoxic. They’re very safe to give. They’re very, very targeted at the bacteria. …

 

 

They kill bacteria, and they don’t do much harm to the host, to the human cells, and that’s great. It makes them drugs that are easy to use. It makes them drugs that are nontoxic to use.

 

 

We’ve over time developed antibiotics that got around a lot of the weapons that the bacteria had to become resistant, so we were really ahead of the game for a long time. We were quickly developing new antibiotics. When bacteria developed resistance, we always had a new antibiotic waiting in the wings, and we had new therapy that we had to offer.

 

 

So what happened?

 

 

It all changed several years ago. What we found is that the pace of development of new antibiotics really began to slow down about a decade ago, and now we began encountering these highly resistant infections, and we didn’t have new antibiotics to use. We had the ones that we had, but we didn’t have anything new.

 

 

Why did it begin to slow down?

 

 

…There’s probably a variety of factors that have contributed to the fact that we don’t have new antibiotics. One might be that we developed a lot of the antibiotics that were easy, if you will, to develop. …

 

 

There are some people who say we sort of picked all the low-hanging fruit, and then it got really hard to develop new antibiotics.

 

 

Another reality is there’s not much money to be made in making new antibiotics, so we saw a lot of drug companies who left the field of antibiotic development because of this combination of factors, that it was getting really hard to discover, to develop new antibiotics, and you don’t make a lot of money in selling these drugs, so the market really wasn’t there.

 

 

…I can’t tell a patient who has a resistant infection, “If we can get you through this next six months or this next year, there’s going to be a great drug that’s coming.” Or I can’t tell oncologists, for example, “Well, six months from now we’re going to have therapies to offer you; we’re going to have something to combat these infections.”

 

 

Why? The drugs aren’t there?

 

 

The drugs aren’t there. And we know it takes a long time to get drugs from the development stage through testing and into the market. Right now, I can’t tell you when you’re going to have a new antibiotic to treat these highly resistant Gram negatives. The best I can say is it’s probably going to be several years, but I can’t point to one that’s in development and say, “We’re going to have that one in three years.” And that’s a scary place to be in.

 

 

… You say you can’t make much money. I guess our society took it for granted that antibiotics were relatively cheap compared to chronic-disease drugs, but also isn’t there some economic calculations in these companies as well? Pressures on them? I don’t think they pulled out because they just don’t care anymore, right?

 

 

…Infections are not that common compared to other types of conditions like high blood pressure or high cholesterol. It’s a reality that many of the drug companies left this market because of financial realities that are placed on them. These are companies that are for-profit companies, and like you said, they have to answer to people. They have to develop drugs that will make money, and that’s not an antibiotic.

 

 

… Can you describe to me a little bit of what went into the thinking with [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) head] Dr. [Thomas] Frieden’s announcement in March about the “nightmare bacteria” in the publication Vital Signs?

 

 

…This new, highly resistant bacteria that we talked about in the Vital Signs is one that has really concerned us simply because it is completely resistant to the most commonly used antibiotics, including some of the last lines of defense. It’s one where we really do have to reach for older, fairly ineffective therapies. It’s one that we saw spreading rapidly within our hospitals, and not just hospitals.

 

 

So this is just one bug?

 

 

It’s a family of bugs.

 

Is this the Klebsiella pneumoniae?

 

 

That’s right. So Klebsiella pneumoniae is one bug in that family, but it happens to be the bug that is the most common that’s developing this very powerful resistance to our antibiotics.

 

 

So there are confluences of factors that are really, really beginning to concern us. One is that it is highly drug-resistant. We didn’t have many therapies or, in some cases, any therapy to offer these patients.

 

 

We began seeing reports from people who were doing some fairly detailed studies, looking at patients who get these infections, and they were saying, “Gosh, in our experience, if you get this resistant bacteria in your blood, half the time those patients die.” Incredibly serious infections.

We began seeing outbreaks of these infections in hospitals, suggesting that it was highly spreadable within our hospital. So that’s something that’s very concerning.

 

 

We also began seeing reports from people who were studying these bacteria in the lab, and they began telling us, look, not only are these bacteria themselves very transmissible within health-care settings, but these bacteria also have the genes for this resistance on these little pieces of DNA that are really very movable, so you also have to worry about the bacteria sharing these resistance weapons with other organisms.

 

 

There’s really this combination of all of these factors as something so concerning to us that we felt the need to really sound the alarm. It’s an alarm that we began sounding several years ago. In 2009 the CDC released recommendations for how hospitals should combat this new type of resistant bacteria, and the Vital Signs I think was a good opportunity for us to reiterate that call, make it even more urgently, if you will, that we really need to do something about this.

 

 

It’s still a relatively infrequent occurrence in most U.S. hospitals, and that was something that we emphasized in the report. It’s bacteria that has been reported to CDC from about 4 percent of our acute-care facilities in the United States. So some have said, Why are you sounding the alarm for something that’s not present in 96 percent of the hospitals that are reporting information to you?”

And to me, that’s the answer. It’s because 96 percent of hospitals have not reported this to us that we need to act now. This is one that we can’t wait around for it to become a bigger problem before we take really aggressive action. It kills too many people. We have too few options to treat it. It spreads too fast. We can’t wait.

 

 

… Talk to me about your interaction and how did you bring this alarm to fruition and the process with Director Frieden.

 

 

Every year, CDC, our group does a Vital Signs report on an issue that’s of pressing importance to health care safety. …

 

 

We began having discussions: Is it time to sound the alarm about this, or is it just too soon? Are we just being overly alarmist if we really call attention to this problem that’s not present in the vast majority of hospitals in the United States?

 

 

As we began discussing this in small groups and discussing it with more and more people, our thinking on it really began to get to the point of, why are we following that same paradigm that we’ve always followed, which is we’ll follow the resistance for a while, and when it gets to be a really big problem, then we’ll sound the alarm and we’ll act on it?

 

 

That hasn’t worked so well for us. We’ve really been behind the game with a lot of these highly resistant pathogens. We began talking and thinking and saying maybe it’s time for a new model. If we’ve not been successful in combating the microbial resistance so far, maybe it’s because we haven’t acted at the earliest stage, when it first came to our attention, to really try to get people to take aggressive action.

 

 

Let’s break that mold. Let’s do something different. Let’s take an aggressive stance. Let’s encourage people to take a really aggressive stance at an early opportunity here. And that’s when we decided that this was what we were going to feature. …

 

 

With this alarm out, did you tell the secretary of health and human services you were about to do this? Did you tell the White House?

 

 

Absolutely. There’s a chain of approvals for these Vital Signs reports, and so it is put in front of a lot of different people. All of the information, how we’re going to communicate about it, is communicated up to the Department of Health and Human Services and on up.

 

 

I’m just curious, because in this same time period, the director of the WHO [World Health Organization], Dr. Margaret Chan, made a similar statement, and also the top public health official in the United Kingdom talked about a catastrophic end event of antibiotics. I wondered if you’d been in touch with them, or was it just serendipity, or was this planned that you would all warn?

 

 

It wasn’t. We hadn’t really been in direct conversations with the folks at the WHO, with the folks in England. …

 

 

But it was really interesting to us to see that in a very short period of time, you had some of the world’s leading public health clinicians from multiple different places who really reached the same conclusion at around the same time, that this was a pressing, serious problem; it was a nightmare; it was something that requires urgent attention.

 

 

This was a very loud alarm and certainly was heard by a lot of people. What did you think of the reaction to it?

 

 

I was actually pleased with the reaction to it. One of the things we worried about was would we simply get fear as a reaction, because the goal of sounding the alarm is not to generate fear; it’s to prompt action.

 

 

What we saw in reaction to the Vital Signs report was people asking the right questions: What can I do? How do we confront this problem? How do we combat this? That’s exactly the discussion that we want to have. The reaction we want was not, “The sky is falling.” The reaction is, “Well, what can we do now so this does not become a bigger problem tomorrow?”

 

 

What’s the real scope of this problem that you’re worried about?

 

 

We worry a great deal about antibody resistance among these Gram-negative organisms. The Gram negatives are a large family. They comprise many, many different types of bacteria. But within them, there’s one group of these Gram-negative bacteria that we’re especially worried about.

It’s a family of Gram-negative bacteria that lives in our intestines, and they go by the fancy word, the Enterobacteriaceae, which comes from the root meaning “inside,” meaning they live inside of people. They live in our intestines. It’s a group of bacteria that is a very common cause of infections, both in hospitals but also in the community.

 

 

Can you describe for me your worry about this particular category of bacteria?

 

 

… It includes some very, very common types of bacteria that lots of people have probably heard about, including one called E. coli, which many of us have heard about as a cause of illness. …

 

 

What we’ve seen over the last decade or so is that this group of bacteria is becoming more and more resistant to antibiotics, and over time, as resistance has continued to develop, we’ve had to use more and more powerful antibiotics to treat these Enterobacteriaceae infections, and that wasn’t an issue for us, because we always did have the next one.

 

 

Several years ago, we encountered a situation where we really ended up in a place where we were down to our last one. We were down to a family of antibiotics called the carbapenems, which were a very powerful group of antibiotics, and they’d always been our savior when we needed them. Whenever we encountered a resistant infection, we were inevitably able to turn to the carbapenems, and we knew that they would work. And that all changed.

 

 

What happened?

 

 

…Around 2000, there was a report of an Enterobacteriaceae — in this case it was one called Klebsiella — and it was resistant to carbapenems. That was not something that we had ever encountered before. Then we began to see it in sporadic reports, and then we began to see it more and more frequently.

 

 

…There were pockets, places like New York City, where they really began seeing this type of carbapenem resistance on a fairly regular basis, and it led to the coining of this term called CRE, carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae, this group of bacteria that was really resistant to antibiotics, resistant to our last line of defense, where we were now really struggling to find effective therapies and in some cases where we had absolutely no therapies at all.

 

 

…What did you do? And what did you see?

 

 

…We began looking at our data at CDC, and we found that over the course of a decade, they had gone from being reported by about 1 percent of hospitals in the country — they’d quadrupled in the span of a decade. They’d gone to 4 percent. Maybe a small number, but still a very concerning trend to us.

 

 

… What has been the federal response to this problem that you call nightmare bacteria?

 

 

…We’ve taken a number of steps to try and raise awareness of it, to educate people about what these bacteria are and why there’s such an urgent need for action. We’ve developed recommendations for the types of actions that we want people to take. It’s not enough to tell people they need to take action. You’ve got to arm them with some things that they can do, and we’ve done that.

 

 

So we recommend, for example, a screening protocol for patients in hospitals where they’re encountering these resistant types of bacteria. We’ve told them how they can test other patients for the bacteria, which we think is especially important right now where we don’t see this very often. We want to know who has it in our health-care facilities. We want to know if we have other cases that we don’t know about. 

 

 

We’ve recommended that when you encounter these types of bacteria, these patients need to be placed into what we call isolation. We need to place them in private rooms whenever we can. When health-care workers enter those rooms, they need to wear a gown, and they need to wear gloves. When they leave the room, they need to take off that gown and gloves, and they need to wash their hands really carefully. So we’ve recommended ways to prevent the spread of these bacteria.

We’re also calling upon people and trying to educate people about how to improve the way that we use antibiotics in our hospitals and outside of our hospitals, because we know we have to approach resistant bacteria on two different fronts.

 

 

We have to prevent them from spreading when they develop, but we also have to take steps to stop them from developing in the first place, or at least slow down their development. And the best way to do that is to improve the way we use antibiotics.

 

 

CDC has engaged in a number of efforts to try and help clinicians improve the way we use antibiotics in all of our different health care facilities and doctors’ offices, hospitals and nursing homes.

 

 

… Talk to me about the public policy response to antimicrobial resistance. Has it been response up to the level of the alarm that you sounded?

 

 

The federal government has actually taken a fairly broad approach to antimicrobial resistance to antibiotics. … There have been a number of different groups within the government that had to be engaged, and that have been engaged. …

 

 

Many years ago, there was the development of something called the Interagency Task Force on Antimicrobial Resistance. There was a call to bring all of the relative groups together and to say: “We need all of you to work together. All of you have different pieces of this puzzle, and you all have to work together on them.” 

 

 

I think the message from this group was that any one of you working alone is never going to be able to solve this problem. Only by having all of you work in a coordinated way could we really get to the bottom of this.

 

 

… The Interagency Task Force was formed in 1999. … It meets once a year, and I just wonder, what has it accomplished?

 

 

… What the task force does is it helps ensure that there’s communication between the agencies, so not just once a year.

 

 

Obviously there are scientists at all these agencies who are communicating on a regular basis. But it provides some points of contact, so if there are issues at CDC, if there are issues that I’m worried about with respect to research, with respect to drug development, I now have a point of contact at the NIH [National Institutes of Health], at the FDA [Food and Drug Administration]. …

 

 

There’s a framework. There are people who now talk on a regular basis. There’s a formal meeting once a year where there’s a formal plan that’s developed. But I think even more important than a formal plan are the parts of work that have come about that I think have progressed because there is now a coordinated strategy to combat resistance.

 

 

You know, for something as important as resistance, which you’ve described so clearly — how it’s changing, how it’s gaining — I’m tempted to ask, you know, if this is a really big public health problem, who’s in charge of this problem for the United States government?  Can you tell me who’s in charge?

 

 

Who’s in charge of resistance?

 

 

Of anti-microbial resistance and fighting it. It’s a threat to public health, right?

It is a threat.

 

 

So who’s in charge of dealing with that? Of coordinating it?

 

 

Well, I think the issue of who’s in charge of combating anti-microbial resistance speaks to the fact that this is a very, very complex problem, so you can’t really have one solution to the problem.  If there were one solution to the problem of anti-microbial resistance, I think you could have one group that was in charge.

 

 

Dr. Srinivasan, I’m just thinking back a little bit about history that when we do have big challenges in public health, oftentimes we’ve tackled them in a big way.  I’m thinking about, for example, HIV/AIDS and how we tackled that problem, and it required a lot of effort and people were in charge. And I took a look the other day at the research levels devoted to the problem of anti-microbial resistance at NIH. Anti-microbial resistance is way down the list. 

 

 

Right.

 

 

It’s actually number 70 on their list.  What does that say about the priority?

 

 

Well, what I think that points to is the fact that our research in this area has lagged. …We’re going to have to do a lot more in the area of antimicrobial resistance.  You know, I think for a long time, we weren’t investing a lot in anti-microbial resistance because we always had new antibiotics to combat the problem.

 

 

We got complacent.

 

 

In a sense, I think we did.  You know, there were always new drugs to treat these infections and so I think the need to do basic research on anti-microbial resistance moved down our priority list.

 

 

And do you think that this is also a problem in which society hasn’t really made it a high enough priority? I know that in some diseases, there are very outspoken groups of advocates and patients, victims. Is this somehow different?

 

 

I think you’re right in that there isn’t a loud voice out there calling for more action on antimicrobial resistance, and I think that’s unfortunate, because the most powerful voice in any discussion of health is the voice of the patient. And here we don’t have a lot of those patients’ voices who are out there telling their stories and calling for more action to combat antimicrobial resistance.

I think that’s something that’s changing slowly. …

 

 

I think we’ve reached a time in society where you’d be hard-pressed to find someone who couldn’t tell you a personal story or have a family member whose life has not been touched by the problem of antimicrobial resistance. And I think we need to convert that level of commonality of antimicrobial resistance to action, to getting people more interested in figuring out ways that we can combat the problem.

 

 

… Do we have enough data about this problem? Is our surveillance good enough about antimicrobial resistance and particularly about some of these Gram negatives that have been a real problem in recent years? …

 

 

… We know this is a problem today. We don’t need more evidence of that. At least certainly I don’t, and I don’t think most other public health officials do. We also know a lot about what we can do to address the problem. Could we know more? Of course we could. We could always benefit from new strategies.

 

 

But we know a lot of things that work now. We know that we can improve the use of antibiotics. We know that we’re not doing what we should be doing. We know that today in our clinics and in our hospitals, up to half of all the antibiotics that are prescribed — up to half in some studies — are either unneeded or patients are getting the wrong drugs to treat their infections. So we know we can do better than that.

 

 

We have lots of good examples where we use antibiotics better, yet we’re not doing it everywhere. We know we can prevent the spread of these infections in our hospitals, yet time and again, when we do these investigations and we talk to the hospitals, people are not doing the simple things. They’re not washing their hands. They’re not wearing the gowns and gloves when it’s recommended. …

 

 

… A lot of people have said to us there’s not that same kind of surveillance when it comes to antimicrobial resistance. …There’s not really a way to understand the spreads throughout the whole country to this particular problem.

 

 

I think we definitely need to do a better job of improving the way we monitor and track not just antibiotic resistance but also antibiotic use. …

 

 

Historically, we at CDC have had little if any information on how antibiotics are being used in our hospitals and other health care settings.

 

 

So there is a definite need to bring the surveillance of both antimicrobial resistance and antimicrobial use into the modern era, and that means we need to do this electronically. We can’t rely on the paper-based reports and those kinds of paper-based systems that we have historically been using a lot of to do this type of surveillance.

 

 

So what we’re doing at CDC is now working very hard to try and harness the power of electronic information, to revolutionize the way we do surveillance for antimicrobial use and antimicrobial resistance.

 

 

The way we’re doing that is we’ve developed two different parts of our national system that we use to track infections in hospitals. It’s called the National Healthcare Safety Network [NHSN], and that now has a new part of it that’s called the Antimicrobial Use [AU] Module.

 

 

It’s kind of a trial right?

 

 

It’s a system that’s up and running. …[it] is a system that allows for completely electronic capture of the antibiotics that are being used in a hospital. …It sends it to us at CDC, but most importantly, it gives it back to the facility in real time.

 

 

It’s a relatively new system and [used at only] a small number of hospitals.

 

It’s a very new system. Enrollment is growing, but it is small right now. And so it’s something that we’re really trying to raise awareness of to get more hospitals to enroll in the system.

The other change that we’re developing is something called the Antibiotic Resistance [AR] Module of this network, this surveillance net.

 

 

…We’d like to have an even fuller picture of antibiotic resistance in our hospitals in the United States, and so what we’re doing is developing a fully electronic system that will extract electronic information on resistance from hospitals and summarize that information and provide it simultaneously both to the health-care facility where the information comes from and to CDC.

That module, which will be launched we hope in the early part of next year, really will be a giant step forward. It will be transformative in our efforts to monitor resistance. It will take us out of the old model, which was doing this manually, trying to collect all this information from a variety of different laboratory systems, and take us to a position where we can do that electronically.

 

 

… I’d like to ask you about the use of antibiotics for farm animals. I know a large share of the antibiotics produced in this country is used in agriculture. Do you see problems there? Is that generating resistance as well as the use for humans?

 

 

We know that the use of antibiotics in any setting, and especially the overuse of antibiotics in any setting, is an issue that will generate resistance, that will lead to problems of resistance. That applies as much for human use as it does for animal use.

 

 

Do you think that if they’re used for animals, there’s actually a pathway to resistance that is a threat to human health?

 

 

I think there is. There have been a number of studies that show that when you give antibiotics to animals, especially to animals that we then eat, there are antibiotics that get into their systems that can develop resistance, and then when we eat the food, we can be exposed to those resistant organisms.

 

 

We also know that if antibiotics are used in animal feed that they can end up in animal waste, so we can end up with antibiotics in our water supplies, and it’s that type of low-level presence of antibiotics that can also lead to issues with resistance. …

 

 

Do you think we have enough data to know what’s happening with the antibiotics used on the farm?

 

 

… I think we know enough to say that we need to be doing a better job of improving appropriate use of antibiotics in all sectors, humans and animals.

 

 

But the agriculture sector is different, because antibiotics have been used there for a long time with an eye toward improving the growth of the animals, really for food purposes, to make them bigger and fatter with less food. Does that concern you as a use?

 

 

Certainly the CDC believes quite firmly, and I think there are a number of veterinary experts here and in other places who agree with the stance that we should never be using antibiotics in agriculture or in people for any other purpose than to treat infections.

 

 

Using antibiotics to promote growth in animals is not a good use of antibiotics. It’s not careful use of this really delicate and invaluable resource. …

 

 

… Do you think that it’s fair to say that we’ve had a failure of capitalism here?

 

 

…The fact that these are for-profit companies that we asked to develop drugs for us, then it should come as no surprise to us if the drugs that we’re asking to develop don’t make money that they’re not going to invest a large amount in making new ones.

 

 

So in a sense, I think it’s going to call for a different approach when we’re talking about drugs that really are critically important to society. They’re a shared resource. Antibiotics are different than any other drug that we have.

 

 

Why do you say that?

 

 

If I overprescribe a drug to treat high blood pressure, if I give it to too many patients, it’s a problem for those patients and for the people who are paying for those patients to get the drug, but it doesn’t create any problems for other patients.

 

 

If I give my patients too many antibiotics — say I am in a hospital, working in a ward, and I create resistant organisms in my patients, those organisms can then be spread to other patients on the ward. My patients can leave the hospital and take those organisms to other hospitals. So I as one individual, with my prescribing pen in one hospital, can create a problem for a very large group of individuals who I’ve never even met. …

 

 

They’re in a way a public resource, so we have I think a responsibility … to steward that resource effectively, much like we do natural resources.

 

 

There were a lot of people who have said that we really should think about antibiotics the way we think about the environment. We all share the air we breathe. If I pollute the air, it has a negative impact on you, just like antibiotics. If I misuse antibiotics, it can have a negative impact on you.

 

 

… Should we change the way we produce them?

 

 

…I think this is clearly an area where drug companies have to remain active. They’re the companies that bring these drugs to market. They make them. They produce them. They know how to do this kind of research. But we can’t rely on them exclusively to do this work.

 

 

We have to view this as something that all of us bear a stake in, so that means we may need to explore ways that we can have better public-private partnerships to develop new antibiotics, to bring them to market. So I think it calls on a new model to develop new antibiotics.

 

 

Does a new model mean that we may need to change the pricing structure? Some people we’ve talked to say that for many, many years, antibiotics were relatively inexpensive compared to blockbuster drugs for chronic conditions and diseases. Do we need to make them more expensive? Is that plausible?

 

 

I would say that that model has already changed. If you look at new antibiotics now, they are very expensive. And that’s a reality of developing these very, very difficult-to-develop and expensive drugs.

 

 

 

So I think as new agents are developed, they are going to be expensive, which I think will call on us to steward them carefully, to use them wisely, and then administer them effectively.

 

 

… Do we need to change the regulatory pathway for new antibiotics? Would that encourage more drug development?

 

 

There’s a lot of discussion about ways that we can change the approval process for new drugs in order to try and get these drugs to market faster, because there’s an urgent need, we know, to get these new agents on the market, and we know our current approval process is a slow process. It’s designed to deliver safe drugs to the public.

 

 

There’s a need, though, to balance that safety with speed, and that’s a difficult balance that we have to strike. But I think there are a lot of discussions that are ongoing about how we might work to speed up the approval of new drugs, perhaps in a very limited way, so that we can at least offer them to the patients who have no other options. …

 

Contiuned...

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Thanks for keeping us Medically informed Jordan..

 

 

The last time I went to a Dr which was 2 Winters ago. for an ever on going flu. He wouldn't give me any antibiotics.

When your pregnant you can't take any antibiotics. So if you get the flu you got to put up with it even if it goes on for nine months.

 

Part of the reasons the antibiotics don't work as good as they use to. Is because you have people who get their kids fully immunised & then there are those that don't.

Then You have people who may go to another country who also haven't had shots. So then you get these superbugs. that become resistant to any antibiotics.

I have found it very hard each visit that I have made to my GP. he won't give you antibiotics.

& a lot of GPs wont,,,They are trying to or aiming for the body to recover almost naturally. build up the bodies self defense...

 

Honestly wont it be the day when NO>>>resident will say I AM SICK!!!!

 

 

If there is one thing I wish I had the time for is to study how the Native American Indians used Herbs for medicines.

"It's a known fact that eighty decibels of rushing water is one of the most pleasing sounds known to mankind. On other hand, ten and a half days at sea is enough water for anybody." 

 

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We watched this on Frontline on pbs the other night...it is too expensive to develope an antibiotic and bring it to market only to have it become ineffective ... The humble olive leaf that was brought to Noah after the flood has natural resistance to germs, thus protecting the olive tree! ..Google it...supposedly works on gram negative and gram positive bacteria..I use it as a liquid in water at the first sign if illness..always works for me and my husband! If one uses it more frequently it lowers blood pressure! Of course if a person suffers from low blood pressure they can't use much.. Also Silver Biotics ASAP is approved by the FDA and works topically on wounds and burns...See! Keep it simple! Doesn't break the bank either..and fits in my to go bag! Every time I go to Vitamin Shoppe to get their brand of liquid olive leaf there are only a couple of bottles left...shows others do their research!..

Now I have plenty of time to study my Watchtower...no need for endless research on health products!

Jehovah is "walking upon the wings of the wind" PS. 104:3b

cat2_e0.gif

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I have seen Olive leaf on the shelf. But didn't know what it was good for.

Thanks Sunray.  I like echinaea. its good to. as well as Kiolic. odorless. 

"It's a known fact that eighty decibels of rushing water is one of the most pleasing sounds known to mankind. On other hand, ten and a half days at sea is enough water for anybody." 

 

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Okay, off to the health food store, and I will get olive leaf oil, and do the appropriate research. This article was so interesting. I ran a little clinic, and, if a person came in with, "an infected spider bite", part of the pre planning for the patient was the, always there, the MRSA kit. And it concerned me. I mean the head lice and scabies were just pests compared to this stuff. I would get out my paranoia, wipe every thing down possible, and know I was playing Russian Roulette. My turn was coming. And these were not just the street type people. You name any lifestyle, and it marched in that door, with that stuff. One sister tried to treat it with home remedies, and she literally almost died. And she is still compromised, health wise.

When I got the pneumonia, then a case of rip roaring bronchitis every time I went out, I went to the medical provider I have, and she just said, "Bea, let's try to get you over this with no more antibiotics." And I was really sick. I fully understood, yet I would get sick every time I went out doors.

I went to the health food store and came out with oil of oregano. And it worked.

Okay, the ocean is broken, medical care is just about to get a pair of handcuffs, kids are going to school with guns to kill, polar caps melting.

The fix? Jehovah's kingdom, and are not we the most privileged people on this earth? While this all concerns us, we are not overwhelmed. And we can actually be pro-active. No guesses, no stumbling around. We do as Jehovah asks us. And he is giving us so much attention to do just that. So, no matter how bad it looks, we are happy and rejoice, simpally because Jehovah has allowed us to have a relationship with Him!

I want to age without sharp corners, and have an obedient heart!

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Okay, off to the health food store, and I will get olive leaf oil, and do the appropriate research. This article was so interesting. I ran a little clinic, and, if a person came in with, "an infected spider bite", part of the pre planning for the patient was the, always there, the MRSA kit. And it concerned me. I mean the head lice and scabies were just pests compared to this stuff. I would get out my paranoia, wipe every thing down possible, and know I was playing Russian Roulette. My turn was coming. And these were not just the street type people. You name any lifestyle, and it marched in that door, with that stuff. One sister tried to treat it with home remedies, and she literally almost died. And she is still compromised, health wise.

When I got the pneumonia, then a case of rip roaring bronchitis every time I went out, I went to the medical provider I have, and she just said, "Bea, let's try to get you over this with no more antibiotics." And I was really sick. I fully understood, yet I would get sick every time I went out doors.

I went to the health food store and came out with oil of oregano. And it worked.

Okay, the ocean is broken, medical care is just about to get a pair of handcuffs, kids are going to school with guns to kill, polar caps melting.

The fix? Jehovah's kingdom, and are not we the most privileged people on this earth? While this all concerns us, we are not overwhelmed. And we can actually be pro-active. No guesses, no stumbling around. We do as Jehovah asks us. And he is giving us so much attention to do just that. So, no matter how bad it looks, we are happy and rejoice, simpally because Jehovah has allowed us to have a relationship with Him!

Bea...oil of oregano is great for everything too but it burns the skin...Olive leaf extract does not burn...be sure to dilute oreganoil oil first before drinking if you choose to use it...I put a dropper of Olive leaf extract in my mouth when I first get up..helps with regularity too!


Edited by Musky

Fixed quote

Jehovah is "walking upon the wings of the wind" PS. 104:3b

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I use oregano and cook with olive oil.  Is that good enough?

Phillipians 4:8 Finally, brothers, whatever things are true, whatever things are of serious concern, whatever things are righteous, whatever things are chaste, whatever things are lovable, whatever things are well-spoken-of, whatever things are virtuous, and whatever things are praiseworthy, continue considering these things. 

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Thanks for keeping us Medically informed Jordan..

 

 

The last time I went to a Dr which was 2 Winters ago. for an ever on going flu. He wouldn't give me any antibiotics.

When your pregnant you can't take any antibiotics. So if you get the flu you got to put up with it even if it goes on for nine months.

 

Part of the reasons the antibiotics don't work as good as they use to. Is because you have people who get their kids fully immunised & then there are those that don't.

Then You have people who may go to another country who also haven't had shots. So then you get these superbugs. that become resistant to any antibiotics.

I have found it very hard each visit that I have made to my GP. he won't give you antibiotics.

& a lot of GPs wont,,,They are trying to or aiming for the body to recover almost naturally. build up the bodies self defense...

 

 

Honestly wont it be the day when NO>>>resident will say I AM SICK!!!!

 

If there is one thing I wish I had the time for is to study how the Native American Indians used Herbs for medicines.

 

Gabe --I tried to PM you and it said your mailbox can not accept messages!  What?  Do you need to delete some?


Edited by Musky

Fixed quote area

LeslieDean

 

Thankful to be among friends everyday!

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If you spent as much effort researching and commenting in the many "theocratic" threads like the WT study or the Bible reading highlights, etc, imagine the beneficial contributions you could make! :)

Sent from my Samsung G3

 

 

Ha, well,  I spend much more time studying Jehovah's word and practicing it then reading news articles (it's a lot more interesting), which actually are part of my work, vicariously without effort. I think I've mentioned before I have a tool that others use for competitive intelligence. It's the nature of the tool to bring in news events at the same time and they have to be reviewed and removed from the DB. So for me it's just a part of daily maintenance. 

 

 

I don't pioneer, but I do get similar hours in. It might seem like I'm here more then I really am , maybe because I just leave myself logged in and am not really here physically, and I could never match the time that a Mod or Admin spend here on the forum reading posts and commenting. I don't really have that type of time to spend, not to mention the significant responsibility you have also.

 

I do view the other "Theocratic" threads all the time and don't post there more because - the answers given in those threads are as good, if not better then, what I have to offer on the subject. I do add here and there when there is something that might fit within the mindhive. I'd be redundant for the most part. When I do see a post that is of like thoughts, I always "like" the comment. 

 

 

Let me explain why I even posted this and why I post other secular subjects so much. Out in service the other day and a woman we were talking to started bringing up subjects on mankind being able to save themselves (with medical science) from the evils of disease etc, I was able to recommend an article and tell her a little about what science said on the subject. She started thinking realistically again and mentioned "it's too scary to NOT believe in science because there is no one else that can save us."

 

I was waiting for the opportunity to point out there actually was someone and she gave it to me. I was able to take advantage of it by virtue of having read a lot of things going on in the world that effect people. yeah, it's long and boring article I agree but I can't tell you how many times I've used articles to keep a conversation going or start conversations at the door that open the way for me to plant the seed of truth.  Be all things to all people...  

 

Another reason, at times, there's a chance that some of this information might actually save someone from harm or pain and suffering.

 

It also serves as a reminder that we are in, what the society calls, the "Twilight of this system of things". The very end of this system of things. Being aware of things happening around us also can be uplifting, seems counterintuitive but looking at things, problems that we know the system or those in it, can not solve strengthens resolve, faith etc.

 

I feel using secular knowledge / events to give people hope of Jehovah's kingdom is a big theocratic contribution no matter where it is in the forum.  To be sure some of the posts are just to show the shear intellectual dishonesty or insanity going on but I think everyone can see that pretty easily.

 

Maybe it's how individuals view articles that makes all the difference in the world. Some might view something like this and think of how much they really do need to rely on Jehovah for everything in life and others might not get it the gist of it at all, they just don't think like that about life in general. I'm not saying they are less thankful or apathetic, they just don't move in the same direction. Life's experiences I guess.

Yada yada...

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Okay, off to the health food store, and I will get olive leaf oil, and do the appropriate research. This article was so interesting. I ran a little clinic, and, if a person came in with, "an infected spider bite", part of the pre planning for the patient was the, always there, the MRSA kit. And it concerned me. I mean the head lice and scabies were just pests compared to this stuff. I would get out my paranoia, wipe every thing down possible, and know I was playing Russian Roulette. My turn was coming. And these were not just the street type people. You name any lifestyle, and it marched in that door, with that stuff. One sister tried to treat it with home remedies, and she literally almost died. And she is still compromised, health wise.

When I got the pneumonia, then a case of rip roaring bronchitis every time I went out, I went to the medical provider I have, and she just said, "Bea, let's try to get you over this with no more antibiotics." And I was really sick. I fully understood, yet I would get sick every time I went out doors.

I went to the health food store and came out with oil of oregano. And it worked.

Okay, the ocean is broken, medical care is just about to get a pair of handcuffs, kids are going to school with guns to kill, polar caps melting.

The fix? Jehovah's kingdom, and are not we the most privileged people on this earth? While this all concerns us, we are not overwhelmed. And we can actually be pro-active. No guesses, no stumbling around. We do as Jehovah asks us. And he is giving us so much attention to do just that. So, no matter how bad it looks, we are happy and rejoice, simpally because Jehovah has allowed us to have a relationship with Him!

 

 

Don't ever read the book "The Hot Zone" -- you'll never be the same. Non-fiction, real story of Ebola and Marburg virus out breaks. About washed my skin off after I read it and anyone having bloodshot eyes I gave WIDE birth ...

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Bea...oil of oregano is great for everything too but it burns the skin...Olive leaf extract does not burn...be sure to dilute oreganoil oil first before drinking if you choose to use it...I put a dropper of Olive leaf extract in my mouth when I first get up..helps with regularity too!

I bought it in capsules! And yes, it helps in ways I had not anticipated! But I will, as I said, off to the health food store...

I want to age without sharp corners, and have an obedient heart!

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Don't ever read the book "The Hot Zone" -- you'll never be the same. Non-fiction, real story of Ebola and Marburg virus out breaks. About washed my skin off after I read it and anyone having bloodshot eyes I gave WIDE birth ...

I read the book, and enjoyed it so much. Scary, yes, but what they do not tell you! An Ebola outbreak on the east coast, from poor infected monkeys, in the 1980's.

I also read and have, Panic in Level 4, also by Richard Preston. Again, scary, but, for me, fascinating. But for Jehovah, mankind would have already wiped itself out. These outbreaks are but an airplane ride away!

I want to age without sharp corners, and have an obedient heart!

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Ha, well, I spend much more time studying Jehovah's word and practicing it then reading news articles (it's a lot more interesting), which actually are part of my work, vicariously without effort. I think I've mentioned before I have a tool that others use for competitive intelligence. It's the nature of the tool to bring in news events at the same time and they have to be reviewed and removed from the DB. So for me it's just a part of daily maintenance.

I don't pioneer, but I do get similar hours in. It might seem like I'm here more then I really am , maybe because I just leave myself logged in and am not really here physically, and I could never match the time that a Mod or Admin spend here on the forum reading posts and commenting. I don't really have that type of time to spend, not to mention the significant responsibility you have also.

I do view the other "Theocratic" threads all the time and don't post there more because - the answers given in those threads are as good, if not better then, what I have to offer on the subject. I do add here and there when there is something that might fit within the mindhive. I'd be redundant for the most part. When I do see a post that is of like thoughts, I always "like" the comment.

Let me explain why I even posted this and why I post other secular subjects so much. Out in service the other day and a woman we were talking to started bringing up subjects on mankind being able to save themselves (with medical science) from the evils of disease etc, I was able to recommend an article and tell her a little about what science said on the subject. She started thinking realistically again and mentioned "it's too scary to NOT believe in science because there is no one else that can save us."

I was waiting for the opportunity to point out there actually was someone and she gave it to me. I was able to take advantage of it by virtue of having read a lot of things going on in the world that effect people. yeah, it's long and boring article I agree but I can't tell you how many times I've used articles to keep a conversation going or start conversations at the door that open the way for me to plant the seed of truth. Be all things to all people...

Another reason, at times, there's a chance that some of this information might actually save someone from harm or pain and suffering.

It also serves as a reminder that we are in, what the society calls, the "Twilight of this system of things". The very end of this system of things. Being aware of things happening around us also can be uplifting, seems counterintuitive but looking at things, problems that we know the system or those in it, can not solve strengthens resolve, faith etc.

I feel using secular knowledge / events to give people hope of Jehovah's kingdom is a big theocratic contribution no matter where it is in the forum. To be sure some of the posts are just to show the shear intellectual dishonesty or insanity going on but I think everyone can see that pretty easily.

Maybe it's how individuals view articles that makes all the difference in the world. Some might view something like this and think of how much they really do need to rely on Jehovah for everything in life and others might not get it the gist of it at all, they just don't think like that about life in general. I'm not saying they are less thankful or apathetic, they just don't move in the same direction. Life's experiences I guess.

Yada yada...

I feel the same! When my thoughts are similar I like or agree as if to say 'I was thinking the same thing'. Other times it is a like because it is a new idea to me or something someone has helped me to see.

Spoken like a true gentleman , Jordan!

LeslieDean

 

Thankful to be among friends everyday!

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I read the book, and enjoyed it so much. Scary, yes, but what they do not tell you! An Ebola outbreak on the east coast, from poor infected monkeys, in the 1980's.

I also read and have, Panic in Level 4, also by Richard Preston. Again, scary, but, for me, fascinating. But for Jehovah, mankind would have already wiped itself out. These outbreaks are but an airplane ride away!

 

 

That's beautiful shep by the way...

 

Here's a picture of mine - he passed away couple of years ago - the summer this picture was taken at 15yrs -- 145 lbs - he lived a long happy life.

 

c7Kyf.jpg

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My mom got the mersa virus when she went in to the hospital with an asthma attack. The hospital neglected to treat her: 1st- with the wrong treatment then: 2nd. with just enough medicine to not treat her, she died within 2 days, as my mom lay in the hospital my Aunt visited her, she had a thorn in her finger. Just being near my mom she got the mersa virus in her hand and it covered her whole hand overnight, she had it treated but could have lost her hand if she didn't see it when she did.  

Safeguard Your Heart for " Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks" Matthew 12:34

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I have a very beautiful , docile 160 # American Bull Dog. He comes to bed like clockwork and rests his massive head on the side of my bed when he is ready for beddy-by! I have to go around behind him and lift one huge paw and place it on the bed then reach under him wrapping one arm over the top of his back and going under his stomach and taking my other arm and placing it between his legs and reaching up to grab my other hand. Sort of like when you interlock your fingers together to give someone a boost up. Well sometimes I get his little nut-a-roonies caught or pinched and he yelps like the baby he is. This dog is going to break my back but I can not get him up any other way.

I know. Why do you let him sleep with you? Because we is a wonderful companion and if you saw his big sad eyes and hanging jowls you could not resist either. I should have a set of stairs built for him because he is way to big for the ones I have seen online.

Dogs are awesome friends and family members aren't they?

LeslieDean

 

Thankful to be among friends everyday!

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