There's nothing wrong with liking the ideal ideas of things. Well, in an ideal sense, obviously some ideals there's some wrong shit about liking them. But utopia ideals, sure, fantasize away.
I like the idea of teleporters, immortality, and invincibility. Great stuff. But in practice, these things rarely are so ideal.
Bacterial vaccinations have a big risk factor, which is... We're mostly bacteria. Or things that look like bacteria from some points of view. E Coli poisoning sucks, right? Vaccine aaaand... you're dead. Because we need specific E Coli bacteria to live. Remember that the COVID antibodies, and the COVID injabulation, produce different things. You do not get COVID antibodies from the injabulation. You instead get an autoimmune response to anything with one particular spike protein in viral form. A very vague and very general thing... You do not want to be vague when you're dealing with LIVING organisms. "Oh yeah, this injabulation makes your body kill off any living cells that show the bacterial sign of they consume other cells... Whoopsies, that includes your own immune system and it an hero'd, well, you're not allowed to sue us!"
While I offer no sources, there was some preliminary evidence in the recent past that the "non-compliant patient" narrative was completely false and antibiotic resistance might actually be countered instead by having the patient discontinue the antibiotics as soon as symptoms are relieved to minimize exposure of the bacteria to the antibiotic used.
Of course, no attempts were made to test the theory in real world practice, likely due to inertia and fears of liability.
It's amazing how arbitrary treatment protocols with antibiotics are.
For example, antibiotic regimens only come in 1, 3, 5, 7, 10 and 14 day courses.
More or less. A strain could still develop, but it would be so cripplingly overspecialized that giving the patient the normal strain for, like, a couple hours would wipe it out.
Most of the medical issues in the world are caused by gross malpractice of someone in the chain of things.
There's nothing wrong with liking the ideal ideas of things. Well, in an ideal sense, obviously some ideals there's some wrong shit about liking them. But utopia ideals, sure, fantasize away.
I like the idea of teleporters, immortality, and invincibility. Great stuff. But in practice, these things rarely are so ideal.
Bacterial vaccinations have a big risk factor, which is... We're mostly bacteria. Or things that look like bacteria from some points of view. E Coli poisoning sucks, right? Vaccine aaaand... you're dead. Because we need specific E Coli bacteria to live. Remember that the COVID antibodies, and the COVID injabulation, produce different things. You do not get COVID antibodies from the injabulation. You instead get an autoimmune response to anything with one particular spike protein in viral form. A very vague and very general thing... You do not want to be vague when you're dealing with LIVING organisms. "Oh yeah, this injabulation makes your body kill off any living cells that show the bacterial sign of they consume other cells... Whoopsies, that includes your own immune system and it an hero'd, well, you're not allowed to sue us!"
While I offer no sources, there was some preliminary evidence in the recent past that the "non-compliant patient" narrative was completely false and antibiotic resistance might actually be countered instead by having the patient discontinue the antibiotics as soon as symptoms are relieved to minimize exposure of the bacteria to the antibiotic used.
Of course, no attempts were made to test the theory in real world practice, likely due to inertia and fears of liability.
It's amazing how arbitrary treatment protocols with antibiotics are.
For example, antibiotic regimens only come in 1, 3, 5, 7, 10 and 14 day courses.
Why not 2? Or 6? Or 11?
More or less. A strain could still develop, but it would be so cripplingly overspecialized that giving the patient the normal strain for, like, a couple hours would wipe it out.
Most of the medical issues in the world are caused by gross malpractice of someone in the chain of things.