December 2003
Antibiotic misuse a factor in SARS epidemic
As if the SARS epidemic
wasn’t frightening enough, one expert on infectious disease and geographic
medicine at the University at Buffalo says the world can expect more SARS-like
outbreaks in the near future
"There's going to be
another SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) sometime; there's no doubt
about it," stated Richard V. Lee, M.D., professor of medicine in the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and an adjunct professor of
anthropology.
One reason for the
gloomy outlook is that the continued overuse and misuse of antibiotics which
creates drug-resistant viral strains and of antiseptics, which could kill
"good germs" that aid the body -- in digestion, for example.
"There are places in
the world that seem to be a Pandora's box for certain kinds of infectious
disease," said Dr. Lee, who studies the health status of geographically
isolated human populations. "The way people live and interact with their
environment sets the stage for letting these viruses out of their box."
He called the spread of
SARS a classic example of how humans provide viruses -- in this case, the
coronavirus -- with the opportunity to evolve into harmful human disease.
Often, the mutation or evolution is a response to contact with antibiotics.
"Germs are smart and they do evolve,” he warned.
SOURCE:
Media Advisory, University at Buffalo. August 21, 2003.
NOTE: This article
appeared in the World Chiropractic Alliance Health Watch electronic
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