Wednesday, December 2, 2009

HSI e-Alert - Will You And Your Loved Ones Survive In A World Without Antibiotics? It's Here Now

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Dear Reader,

While the mainstream spends all its energy trying to scare us about the swine flu "pandemic", antibiotic-resistant bacteria are killing tens of thousands of people a year in the US alone.

MRSA kills around 20,000 individuals a year in the US. Clostridium difficile kills over 5,000.

Some organisms are even more deadly: vancomycin resistant enterococcos has a 100% fatality rate when it reaches the blood. Now a new report (Nov 1st 2009) has announced an emerging strain of MRSA which is FIVE TIMES MORE LETHAL than the "normal" strain. 50% of patients die: that's like playing Russian roulette with 3 bullets in the revolver!

Yet the media mostly ignores this ever-present menace.

You need to understand the risks you are facing and what you can do about it.

We are facing a world very different to the one you grew up in and which we have all shared for the last 70 years or so. Bacteria and pathogens are beginning to re-assert their old menace from the days before antibiotics.

We are entering a "world without antibiotics". What will you do to help you and your family survive?

The answer was and always will be: KEEP INFORMED. Learn the facts.

Dr. Keith Scott-Mumby, an internationally known British MD now living in California, has prepared for HSI an important and comprehensive report on the many safe and workable alternatives to antibiotics. He calls it "How To Survive In A World Without Antibiotics".

http://clicks.hsibaltimore.com//t/AQ/r6M/tVw/AAECaw/AQ/At6reg/Aa6Z

Dr. Keith is a former professor of nutrition from the Open International University for Complementary Medicines and author of several health books. His standards of writing and research are impeccable; he sticks to science and not folk tales and conjecture; and you will find a great deal of powerful life-saving knowledge in what he writes.

For instance one common food extract actually out-performed tetracycline and vancomycin, in a study carried out by the US Department of Agriculture. Vancomycin is considered the "last ditch" antibiotic against MRSA.

Deadly bacteria can be beaten and there are many valid options. But you need to learn what to do in a life-threatening emergency. As Prof. Keith says, "It's too late if you wait till someone gets sick. With many of these new deadly organisms you can pick up an infection in the morning and be dead by the end of the day."

Learn how to survive in a world without antibiotics. You can hear Prof. Keith explain everything on this webpage, in a short but fascinating video:

http://clicks.hsibaltimore.com//t/AQ/r6M/tVw/AAECaw/Ag/At6reg/kY5V

To Your Best Days,

Paul Amos
Associate Director
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2 comments:

Danser said...

MRSA – The Superbug

MSRA stands for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus Aureus. It is a staph infection that is resistant to most antibiotics that would be used to treat it. Most often, patients who suffer from this type of infection are in hospitals, long-term care facilities or similar environments. Staph is usually contracted by people with weakened immune systems. They have either been ill, or they are elderly. It manifests as a skin infection or a severe form of pneumonia. Due to its resilience, it is known as a “superbug”. Not everyone who contracts the infection becomes symptomatic. However, they are carriers and can pass the germ to others.

This bacterium is usually harmless, but will enter the body if there is a cut or some type of sore or abrasion. Other ways staph can infect the body is through the nose and urinary tract. In recent years, there has been an increase in healthy people who contract staph infections. They are usually athletes or people who share personal items or equipment. MSRA is the result of unnecessary or excessive antibiotic use over the course of many years, or decades. The body has built up a resistance to the medications frequently prescribed for the flu, colds and minor infections.

Despite being broad-based medications, antibiotics do not destroy every germ they target. Those that remain may mutate and become resistant to almost all typical medications. Staph infections move quickly. Symptoms are visible in 24-48 hours of being contracted. They include small red bumps or boils that are often mistaken for pimples or spider bites. Fever and rashes may also manifest. Within 72 hours, MSRA can gain a strong hold in the body. Once that happens, they are resistant to most treatments. The bumps grow and become painful. Infections located in the skin can usually be treated effectively if caught quickly.

More virulent strains spread rapidly and cause severe illness, affecting the vital organs. Widespread infections vary from flesh-eating pneumonia to those that affect the valves of the heart, bones, and joints. The population segments that have the highest risk for contracting MSRA are people with weakened immune systems. This includes the elderly, young children, diabetics, cancer patients and intravenous drug users. Those that live around a lot of people, such as college students, prison inmates and athletes are also at risk. Colloidal silver, taken properly may help reduce the risk of infection. For more information, visit www.nutrasilver.com

Unknown said...

Dr. Keith Scott-Mumby, an internationally known British MD now living in California, has prepared for HSI an important and comprehensive report on the many safe and workable alternatives to antibiotics. He calls it "How To Survive In A World Without Antibiotics “ Deadly bacteria can be beaten and there are many valid options. But you need to learn what to do in a life-threatening emergency. As Prof. Keith says, "It's too late if you wait till someone gets sick.