Tag: antibiotics

  • Resistance isn’t futile

    Resistance isn’t futile

    Like the Borg in Star Trek, microbes are constantly evolving to get past their host’s defences (thankfully they don’t tend to assimilate their hosts into a hive mind). They are becoming resistant to the drugs created to prevent diseases caused by them, and this tactic is far from futile.

  • What can we learn from ye olde medicine?

    What can we learn from ye olde medicine?

    Ellie Bennett explores how answers to the global problem of antimicrobial resistance, a decidedly modern phenomenon, may lie in the lotions and potions of our ancient predecessors. The Romans gargled urine for mouthwash, the Ancient Egyptians used dung as remedy for, well, everything and Hippocrates diagnosed his patients’ by nibbling on an amuse bouche of…

  • New funding to fight antibiotic resistance

    New funding to fight antibiotic resistance

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    Since the 1940s, we have been abusing antibiotics, using them to treat any infection under the sun. In the short term, this worked. Our sore throats went away, our infections subsided, and we went on with our daily lives. The rash use of antibiotics to treat everything, however, has a long-term effect, one that is…