Originally posted by ahinton
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Antibiotics
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Originally posted by Alison View PostSo none of us have ever been to the doctor and been ever so slightly disappointed that
we weren't prescribed antibiotics ?
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scottycelt
Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostI can vouch for such signs on rural Hampshire buses (Winchester to Hursley to be precise) in 1973.
My constantly pipe-smoking Aberdeenshire grandfather (who lived till 93) greatly amused his grandchildren by occasionally spitting into a roaring coal fire in our lounge in the winter (maybe fortunately, I cannot quite recall where his phlegm ended up during the rest of the year).
What is beyond much doubt is that personal habits and practices were somewhat different in the good old days ...
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Originally posted by Alison View PostSo none of us have ever been to the doctor and been ever so slightly disappointed that
we weren't prescribed antibiotics ?I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostIf my boyhood recollections are at all accurate, it was a common if often-ignored sign on the upper-deck of Glasgow Corporation trams and buses as well ...
My constantly pipe-smoking Aberdeenshire grandfather (who lived till 93) greatly amused his grandchildren by occasionally spitting into a roaring coal fire in our lounge in the winter (maybe fortunately, I cannot quite recall where his phlegm ended up during the rest of the year).
What is beyond much doubt is that personal habits and practices were somewhat different in the good old days ...
Six months of those, I think, on commercial radio and almost certainly a part of the anti-smoking agenda. While its objectives are no doubt well-intentioned, it has become absolutely obsessed with it so that everything else is ignored. Like prevention.
Having said as much, it is probably true that 99.99% who went to football or punk music events in the 1970s emerged from all the fashionable "gobbing" quite healthy. There is, I suppose, that thing in life about good and bad fortune, not to mention immunity.
Unquestionably it is a filthy habit. Really horrible. At the same time, I have listened to phone-in programmes for an hour where every caller, mainly 20-somethings, has been extremely heated about someone seen spitting in the street. Unprecedented!
But the average person has 10 sexual partners. That means many have 50. A certain irony there. Any individual's health assessments are based on his/her idea of the acceptably normal and the unacceptably disgusting. And they tend to be unreal.Last edited by Guest; 19-11-12, 08:54.
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostIf my boyhood recollections are at all accurate, it was a common if often-ignored sign on the upper-deck of Glasgow Corporation trams and buses as well ...
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Originally posted by Alison View PostSo none of us have ever been to the doctor and been ever so slightly disappointed that
we weren't prescribed antibiotics ?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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amateur51
Originally posted by french frank View PostSince I don't have to go out mingling with other people on a daily basis, I just stay at home, in bed if necessary, until I feel better.
In part I think the issue becomes a problem because some employers don't recognise the GP's telling an employee to stay at home to get better as a valid response. They want to see paperwork and a bottle of pills is an added evidential bonus.
Of course some employees will swing the lead - but then again some employers dodge I mean evade :double doh: I mean avoid paying full taxes.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
In part I think the issue becomes a problem because some employers don't recognise the GP's telling an employee to stay at home to get better as a valid response. They want to see paperwork and a bottle of pills is an added evidential bonus.
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostOf course some employees will swing the lead - but then again some employers dodge I mean evade :double doh: I mean avoid paying full taxes.
In order not to stray from the topic, I wonder how much tax reduction of that kind is achieved by pharmaceutical companies that manufacture antibiotics?...
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John Shelton
These links may be useful; how accurate their description of a critical situation is I've no way of knowing. (I'd add the only GP Surgeries I've been in for years have displayed notices about non-prescription of antibiotics).
Losing antibiotics would be disastrous for humanity. It is estimated that antibiotics have saved over 80 million lives since the 1940s, so losing them (without having an adequate replacement) would lead to millions of deaths.
Antibiotics are overprescribed. That is, they are given out in many cases where they will achieve little or nothing for the patient. On its own, this would merely be wasteful, but usage of antibiotics increases the development of antibiotic resistant organisms and this is bad for everyone. Today's Guardian has an article suggesting that antibiotic
Frankly, pharmaceutical companies as well as governments and the European Commission need to really get their act together," says Walsh, who has been urging co-ordinated efforts across the world to put in place good surveillance systems to find out what resistance is developing and where, and then look for interventions. He had Columbia, Mexico, Thailand and India all willingly on board for one surveillance scheme, but the European Commission would not fund it. "What we need is for somebody to give us something like €3m [£2.5m] a year. It's not a lot of money."
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Anna
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostIn part I think the issue becomes a problem because some employers don't recognise the GP's telling an employee to stay at home to get better as a valid response. They want to see paperwork and a bottle of pills is an added evidential bonus.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Anna View PostIn my last job there was a pretty strict rule - if someone turned up with a real stinker of a cough and cold (not just a bit sniffly but a full-blown honking affair) then as long as the work could be redistributed they were sent home for 3 days (which is the amount of time you can be absentee through illness without a Doctor's note I think) To me this seemed so sensible in curbing infection to other employees who were grateful to be spared even if it meant more work for a couple of days. No-one is indispensible. However, this was not in a large organisation but a small country practice where we all pulled together.
I'm sure that Simon can expain all this, Anna
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