Members
Login
Sign Up!!!
Categories
Arts
Business
Custom Research
Economics
Film
Foreign
Government and Law
History
Literature
Medical
Miscellaneous
People
Personal Essays
Philosophy
Psychology
Science and Technology

Support
FAQ
Customer Service
Site Search

     Home Customer Service Acceptable Use Policy Site Search

     Enter Search Topic:
 

Already a member? Go here to log in and view the entire paper!

Join Now!
by: Credit Card
Join Now!
by: Online Check
Membership Benefits

Super Bugs & Antibiotics

This is an excerpt from the paper...

The discovery of antibiotics is widely hailed as one of the miracles of modern medicine. However, the widespread use and misuse of such infection-fighting medicines have given rise to a new generation of infectious bacteria, known as ôsuper-bugsö. When bacteria survive antibiotics, they develop resistance. This resistance is passed to future generations of the bacteria, making them all but immune to antibiotics commonly used to treat such infections. The misuse of antibiotics, including not using all of a prescription or overusing them, and the practice of providing livestock with large doses to spur growth and offset unsanitary conditions has given rise to ôthree species of pathogens that have acquired multi-drug resistance (MDR)ö (Will 1995, 18). This analysis will discuss these three species of ôsuper-bugsö, including current government and health community efforts to combat them.

There are three species of pathogens that have become known as ôsuper-bugsö, because of their ability to survive conventional antibiotics. The three species of ôsuper-bugsö include: Pneumococcus (middle-ear infection); Staphylococcus aureus (wound, skin, and blood infections); and Enterococcus faecium (septicemia, endocarditis, wound and urinary tract infections) (Will 1995). Such bacteria have become immune to common antibiotics prescribed to treat them. The biggest reason for their development is the overuse and misuse of antibiotics in people and animals.

. . .
Some common words found in the essay are:
Bugs Introduction, Palumbi Stenger, According Nelson, Perdue Tyson, Project Bioshield, Methicillin Zyvox, Nelson Nov, Stenger Sep, Ainsworth Jun, Weisberg Jan, super bugs, public health, nelson 2003, health community, project bioshield, species pathogens, bacteria immune, lack pharmaceuticals, species ôsuper-bugsö, strains bacteria,
Approximate Word count = 955
Approximate Pages = 4 (250 words per page)

Membership Benefits
Click here to Join Now!
by: Credit Card
Click here to Join Now!
by: Online Check






to Over 32,000 Professionally Written Papers!!!
 


All papers are for research and reference purposes only!
Copyright © 2009 LotsOfEssays.com
All rights reserved. Webmasters make $$$