Reference analysis
The use of antibiotics is a form of medical treatment, but the abuse of antibiotics has become more and more serious in recent years. Many small clinics use antibiotics to treat patients in order to achieve immediate relief. But the overuse of antibiotics can do more harm than good.
First of all, although the symptoms of disease in the body will be relieved immediately after using antibiotics, many people regard antibiotics as a "panacea". However, if antibiotics are abused and our bodies develop antibodies and drug dependence, we will not be able to survive until we really When needed, our bodies will be put into a situation where no medicine is available. In addition, excessive intake of antibiotics will also kill the normal bacteria in our bodies, allowing pathogenic bacteria to take advantage of them, eventually causing death of the human body.
Secondly, the abuse of antibiotics also reflects the lack of social responsibility of many small clinics, pharmacies and even doctors. Often for the sake of economic interests, patients' safety is ignored. The profit-oriented medical model will inevitably lead to distrust in the doctor-patient relationship and will not take advantage of the reform of the medical system. At the same time, the irresponsible pursuit of profits and the emphasis on miraculous treatment results will inevitably damage the interests of some conscientious doctors, resulting in the phenomenon of bad money driving out good money.
Of course, antibiotics cannot be demonized excessively. Normal use of antibiotics is helpful in the treatment of diseases. The key is to use antibiotics rationally. Therefore, the rational use of antibiotics should start from the following aspects:
Strengthen publicity and education. On the one hand, we must improve doctors' professional ethics and social responsibility and use antibiotics rationally. On the other hand, we should also call on the public to treat antibiotics rationally. Second, the Food and Drug Administration should strengthen supervision measures on the use of antibiotics so that antibiotics can be used legally and rationally. Third, legal protection must be improved, and penalties for doctors and clinics that abuse antibiotics must be increased to increase the cost of violating the law.
As the saying goes: "When things go to extremes, they must be reversed." Everything has its two sides. As long as we use antibiotics rationally, we don't have to demonize antibiotics. Only by using them rationally can antibiotics truly benefit mankind.
Summary of ideas