Despite our differences over so many things, I think that we might as a group be able to have some small impact in society as regards those things we all believe to be right.
The subject covered by the brief article above is, I'm sure, one such. If we all refuse antibiotics unless we really need them, and if we all explain to two other people at some point during, say, the next year, how dangerous it is not to complete courses and also to take them unnecssarily, then maybe it will have a tiny impact.
My current GP - who is kind-natured but for whose diagnostic and prescriptive abilities, I, along with many others, don't have much time - is a big fan of giving them out like sweets, and on at least two occasions over the past 10 years I've managed to recover from things well enough without them, despite her urging. I was happy to take them when I got a bad infection in my arm that wasn't clearing up, though, which from my own reading around the subject I think is fair enough.
Don't forget, also, that many non-organic and/or factory farmed items, especially cheap poultry and eggs, contain traces of antibiotics, which can build up over the years in one's system. (Avoid factory poultry if you can anyway, for all kinds of reasons.)
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