Reconsidering Antibiotics Prior to Modern Medicine and After

Microorganisms are the most predominant of all creatures. Microbes are often regarded as an outside force as if they attack us from the outside, but in fact, billions, even trillions, of them live inside or on us. The number of microbes in our bodies outnumbers the number of cells in our bodies.

Microbes are the likely culprits that make you feel confused or unwell. They can be the cause of disabilities that do not have obvious causalities, and greatly impact health and longevity.

While modern medical science has risen to fight infectious disease since the early 1900s which has saved many people’s lives by creating synthetic antibiotics that target specific microbes, something dastardly has occurred. These microbe-specific antibiotics have caused the microbes to mutate in their persistent struggle to survive. Many of these evolved microbes even use antibiotics for fuel, and they are so very intelligent. They learn to evade antibiotics, hide, and imitate healthy cells, and their attacks on the immune system can have life-threatening results.

The problem is so pervasive that it is common for a healthy individual who has checked in to a hospital for a traumatic injury, is often found to be facing a life-threatening circumstance. While the wound treatment was successful, the patient is often attacked by dangerous mutant microbes and faces mortal consequences as the hospital is the breeding ground for such treatment-resistant superbugs.

Pharmaceuticals, while they profit wildly from the microbial mutations, are in a constant whirlwind of activity of identifying the new variant, creating a new antibiotic to wipeout the hybrid invader, but by the time it gets to market the microbe is already beginning to evolve in response to attempted medical interventions in the meantime, because a doctor cannot NOT treat a patient because there is no available treatment available for fear of being sued.

So, the doctor enters the symptoms into his computer and prescribes the matching pharmaceutical, knowing that he or she is contributing to the next mutation. This is the standard operating procedure for practicing medicine, for which the only answer is medical malpractice insurance. It is up to the doctor to follow the procedure to be free from personal liability.

Antibiotics are problematic in their ability to kill targeted bacteria but also kill bacteria that is beneficial, if not necessary, for a healthy human condition. Doing so simply prepares for the next round of battle, leaving the weakened human body with less to counter the next attack, resulting in a failure of healthy status.

Not to mention the many people who are developing allergies to certain antibiotics, these unfortunate individuals are actually attacked by the medicine that was made to help them cope with their presenting malady, adding insult to injury.

If that wasn’t enough, then there is the buildup of toxins that linger in the body, particularly organs like the liver, spleen, kidneys, and even bone marrow.

Physicians are helpless in the widespread purveyance of microbes gone wild in their attempt to assert themselves as the last living thing on our planet as they morph and taunt medical science which is caught in a dangerous dance of the one step forward and two steps back shuffle in the battle for life.

Physicians may not be helpless if they had any idea that natural antibiotics that avail themselves all over our planet freely hold within them the key to ending such a battle once and for all.

Prior to the introduction of penicillin which opened the gateway for new and improved (and profitable) drugs to treat patients, medicine relied on natural methods of fighting infections. Many natural compounds used as antibiotics were dispensed successfully, such as silver water, sulfur, camphor, echinacea, goldenseal, thyme, horseradish, garlic, and ginger.

In fact, before 1940 antibiotics were made from other non-toxic herbs besides those aforementioned, such as Seneca, burdock, cinnamon, birch and cherry bark, clove, cumin, sage, balsam, wintergreen, citronella, coriander, cardamom, cumin, and oregano, among many others.

Medicinal oregano oil is the overall winner in its ability to destroy microbes of all kinds, even mutant varieties. Not to be confused with oregano used regularly to flavor foods of all kinds, medicinal oregano is derived from only one of 40 varieties of oregano and originates from the Mediterranean. Many an oil of oregano can be disguised and marketed in health stores as an antibiotic but it will not have the killing power of the medicinal variety.

One good source of the medicinal oil of oregano, which is also a natural antiseptic, powerful antioxidant, and acts as an anti-venom, is the North American Herb and Spice Company under the brand names of Oregamax or Oreganol and can be found online at https://www.northamericanherbandspice.com

 

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *