When Antibiotics Don't Work (full documentary) | FRONTLINE

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FRONTLINE PBS | Official

FRONTLINE PBS | Official

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 4 400
@secluse
@secluse 2 жыл бұрын
Addi passed away in 2019 at age 20 when her donated lungs failed, she said she did not want to be put back on the list because she had been given her gift. There are some lovely articles covering all her milestones and accomplishments during her "gifted" time. Her name is Addie Rerecich, she touched so many and certainly made the most of those lungs, and those lungs gave her 8 years.
@seanlanglois8620
@seanlanglois8620 2 жыл бұрын
People like her is why I became an organ donor
@crystallicausi189
@crystallicausi189 2 жыл бұрын
Awe that's so sad but amazing she made it until she was 20. The way her mom sounded she wasn't sure if she would even make it five years. I was just thinking about Covid 19 and how it's impacted Addie. Sad to hear she passed what a sweet girl
@aaronburge3680
@aaronburge3680 2 жыл бұрын
Life can be very cruel
@ThawinginVA
@ThawinginVA 2 жыл бұрын
Dayum
@robertosantos-vx6pn
@robertosantos-vx6pn 2 жыл бұрын
I can not imagine what it would feel like to have your child suffering like this and feeling so helpless. I pray now she is no longer suffering she is in heaven giving thanks to God for the time she was with us. Thanks for sharing this info.
@jessicalisa5316
@jessicalisa5316 2 жыл бұрын
We should be equally, if not more, concerned with, the use of antibiotics in the agricultural industry. About 80% of all antibiotics are used in agriculture, either in concentrated feeding operations (pigs, poultry, aquaculture) or on crops (citrus). This type of excessive use is allowing for resistance genes to become very widespread among bacteria in our air, water, and foods.
@pamelatanner788
@pamelatanner788 2 жыл бұрын
YES!! The animals r raised in such unhealthy unnatural crammed together situations that they r petri dishes for diseases. So they r given as prevention instead of changing practices back to more natural and healthy settings for the animals. I don't eat animal products anymore because it supports these horrible situations. And bacteria can be transferred from these loaded situations into our kitchens.
@flirtwithdanger_les
@flirtwithdanger_les 2 жыл бұрын
Very surprised the video did not mention this usage.
@teriw56
@teriw56 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly
@cosmicrust9715
@cosmicrust9715 2 жыл бұрын
This Is What Happens When Traditional/Herbal Medicine is Censored and Demonized by GOV and BIG PHARMA👍 All They Care About is DRUGS and PROFITS😪
@BoatLoadsofDope
@BoatLoadsofDope 2 жыл бұрын
@@cosmicrust9715 well, natural medicine has it's stigma from religious superstition. Herbs are often a good supplement. But not a cure for complex illnesses. Pharmaceutical drugs are both good and bad. Bacteriophages seems like the promised super weapon.
@updownstate
@updownstate 2 жыл бұрын
I was working in a retail pharmacy in 89 when cephalexin hit the retail market. It had been talked up as the brand new last-ditch antibiotic to be used only after all others had failed. The day it became available we got script after script. MDs who had been prescribing amoxicillin for years suddenly switched. I discussed this with my father who was an RPh and a PhD chemist. He predicted overuse was going to train new bugs to be resistant and people would end up sicker than before. And here we are.
@believ100
@believ100 Жыл бұрын
@@edwardschwenk3100 It's pushed by the Big Pharma so they can recover their research costs. Never mind the consequences. After all it's a capitalistic society.
@notaclu6911
@notaclu6911 Жыл бұрын
should I be worried. I have had a UTI for over three years now. No antibiotics worked to clear it or the pain and my specialist tried many. Last drug I am on now is Cephalexin. It hasn't cured it but it keeps it under control ie: no pain. Have been on Cephalexin every day now for over a year.
@riverchaser9175
@riverchaser9175 Жыл бұрын
It’s been studied that long term Amoxicillin doesn’t create resistance. It blows my mind that doctors skip over amoxicillin, unless it’s contraindicated.
@zelo6237
@zelo6237 Жыл бұрын
@@notaclu6911 have you had a bacteria culture done?
@notaclu6911
@notaclu6911 Жыл бұрын
@@zelo6237 no idea. Been in hospital twice on a drip to try to get rid of it.
@mihirojha4475
@mihirojha4475 Жыл бұрын
I'm a microbiologist about to begin my research on alternative methods to treat antibiotic resistant bacterial infections..... Wish me luck y'all. Thoughts and prayers with everyone who got affected by such bacteria. I always get annoyed when doctors prescribe antibiotics even in the most benign cases of infections. That's a recipe for disaster in the long run. We are nearing the time when antibiotics will become completely useless. That's terrifying.
@trashcamprod
@trashcamprod Жыл бұрын
Bacteriophages, perhaps?
@ramppit
@ramppit Жыл бұрын
Phage the Russian have been using it for decades
@keileabrooke
@keileabrooke Жыл бұрын
Manuka honey, silver, baking soda, salt
@asiachung30
@asiachung30 Жыл бұрын
@@keileabrookeare you trying to mock the doctors and patients that go through such tragedy ? Why are people dying if it was that simple
@jesswalton8452
@jesswalton8452 Жыл бұрын
It's being tested for direct drug delivery, however bacteriophages can often induce an immune response, so they are likely to be killed before they reach the target site@@trashcamprod
@ronjay2791
@ronjay2791 2 жыл бұрын
Lost a 6 month old son in September of 1999 to Kleb. Haven’t heard it even mentioned since until this program. Never knew he had it until 3 months after autopsy when it was grown in a culture sample from his lungs. For those 3 months the we were being prepared for SIDS because there was no obvious signs of anything being the cause of death. At the time, my wife and I were told that about two infants per year die from Kleb in Arkansas and it was 100% fatal in infants. Woke up one morning and found him gone. Doctors said that his immune system went “haywire” and just shut his body down. To this day I have always wondered how in the hell he got that bacteria in his body. RIP Andrew Ronald Jay 3/24/99 to 9/24/99
@TheCatzMeowMix
@TheCatzMeowMix 2 жыл бұрын
@ Ron Jay… I’m very sorry for your Loss. Always Remember this though. You NEVER LOSE the ONE YOU LOVE…. AS LONG as YOU REMEMBER the ONE you’ve lost. =^..^=
@Tendomcgoobin
@Tendomcgoobin 2 жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry mate.
@coppertuberon937
@coppertuberon937 2 жыл бұрын
@@TheCatzMeowMix …
@judithdarida6998
@judithdarida6998 2 жыл бұрын
Thx for sharing your story. I’m 72& recently got. 3 antibiotic reactions, at a hospital…after which my arrhythmia/AFib kicked in , so had to recover in the Cardio area until I could go home. Now have a List of 7 to show every doc…..
@coadybarnum
@coadybarnum 2 жыл бұрын
RIP
@lesliecurran1704
@lesliecurran1704 2 жыл бұрын
70 percent of antibiotics sold in the United States are used in animal factory farming. This needs to be understood, it is a major cause of antibiotic resistance. This is another reason why we need to rethink food choices.
@WaningGibbous
@WaningGibbous 2 жыл бұрын
I think it closer to 90 -95%
@mary9983
@mary9983 2 жыл бұрын
TY! Most people dont understand how toxic to the environment and ourselves factory farms are
@ZerudaDensetsu
@ZerudaDensetsu 2 жыл бұрын
True, best thing would be to have your own crops. Between GMO in the crops, pestisites in/on the crops, anti-biotics in meat, and plastic and toxins in fish there is little to nothing left in terms of fresh produce. :/
@astairawood9189
@astairawood9189 2 жыл бұрын
The food industry is the main creator of drug resistant antibiotics😭 They should not be allowed to use it in our meats and other foods.
@MrBilld75
@MrBilld75 2 жыл бұрын
Glad we outlawed it here in Canada. Some States don't do it either, it varies. If whoever they are selling to doesn't want that, then they will produce it without it. It's not a blanket thing like it used to be and nobody cared because they didn't know and they used them to fatten up livestock. But since this rise in antibiotic resistance, many have moved away from that practice.
@Radhaun
@Radhaun 2 жыл бұрын
I know 6 people out of 18 dying sounds really bad, and I don't want to downplay the tragedy, but we should feel pretty proud of the hospital and it's staff. They contained such a dangerous infection over a 6mo period, only had 18 infected out of possibly hundreds of patients, and saved 2/3rds of them from an aggressive, antibiotic resistant bacteria with a known high mortality rate. They really did a fantastic job.
@EvanBear
@EvanBear 2 жыл бұрын
They did what they could with what they had. It could've been so much worse, MRSA is a bitch.
@SDSG0515
@SDSG0515 2 жыл бұрын
Great comment, it takes a lot of dedicated work and care to accomplish that results.
@ErinJeanette
@ErinJeanette 2 жыл бұрын
Agreed!! They did an amazing job. I'm going back to school for a degree in the medical field and I'm so excited, I really admire nurses and doctors and everyone who works to help people.
@GirlSmotheredToDeath
@GirlSmotheredToDeath 2 жыл бұрын
@@ErinJeanette Good luck to you!
@ErinJeanette
@ErinJeanette 2 жыл бұрын
@@GirlSmotheredToDeath thank you ❤️
@signupisannoying
@signupisannoying Жыл бұрын
Addie had to go through ECMO and lung transplant and regularly took a lot of pills every day just to get another 8 years of life. So for all of us who are lucky enough to not have to go through this, let's appreciate how precious is our lungs, health and our lives.
@edwigcarol4888
@edwigcarol4888 Жыл бұрын
Priceless Let's appreciate our lungs, each of its alveoli.. Let us sit still and breathe aware of the air coming in nourishing us... breathing is a wonderful thing
@jadeshuks3339
@jadeshuks3339 10 ай бұрын
another 8 years of suffering and intubation, that's really sad
@nadineb2726
@nadineb2726 9 ай бұрын
It's luck of the draw. We can pray and be thankful all day long and it isn't gonna make a difference when it comes down to illness. Contrary to what many very religious people would believe or have one belief it doesn't come down to praying it comes down to fate
@90klh
@90klh Ай бұрын
@@signupisannoying every day I try to feel gratitude. My body won't last forever and i wish I didn't spend so much time worrying about when it's gonna fail
@loditx7706
@loditx7706 2 жыл бұрын
I was so involved in Addie’s story that I looked her up and discovered she had passed. In this documentary her mother said they had bought her some time and that is wonderful. That she had that additional eight years to live and love and spread joy. I am sure she used them wisely and basically they all had time to prepare for her departure and she became mature enough to decide her own fate. It could have been one of my babies(youngest now 42) . What strength she and her mother had and what a bond. I love you, Addie. Thank you, Addie’s mom, for sharing her story.
@ejazrahim4183
@ejazrahim4183 2 жыл бұрын
you also brave enough ... GOD bless.
@loditx7706
@loditx7706 2 жыл бұрын
@@ejazrahim4183 Same to you. ❤️
@Kenny-yl9pc
@Kenny-yl9pc Жыл бұрын
That is so tragic… I just cried the whole time… She was so young and innocent, I don't understand it… it is just unfair and not right… The system is so corrupt and broken that we can't do anything to make it better and prevent future tragedies like Addie's, it makes me just angry…
@marydavis8132
@marydavis8132 Жыл бұрын
RIP DEAR ADDIE. YOU WERE AN EARTH ANGEL IN LIFE, And NOW YOU'RE A FOREVER ANGEL IN HEAVEN With JESUS And ALL THE OTHER BEAUTIFUL ANGELS.💜🙏💜
@chefscorner7063
@chefscorner7063 9 ай бұрын
I pray her caretakers were able to fill those 8 years with as many different experiences as possible, in order to give her a lifetime of memories in her remaining time. May you R.I.P. 🧎‍♂️🙏🙇‍♂️
@jennywu73
@jennywu73 2 жыл бұрын
Septis almost killed me. I was in ICU for a month. My body shut down and was on dialysis and a feeding tube. I was given two gallons of blood transfusion. I'm thankful I am still alive.
@Unsolvedfanatic
@Unsolvedfanatic 2 жыл бұрын
2 GALLONS?! Try 2 UNITS/PINTS
@justthetruth2662
@justthetruth2662 2 жыл бұрын
awesome
@leskobrandon691
@leskobrandon691 2 жыл бұрын
I'm glad u r alive as well. This world needs you!
@marier1127
@marier1127 2 жыл бұрын
❤​@@Unsolvedfanatic
@cherylhayes75
@cherylhayes75 2 жыл бұрын
As an acute care nurse of 27 years, I have watched resistant bacteria progress to where we are today. And this is a multilevel issue-pharmaceutical companies, hospitals, insurance companies and the government. It is sad and ugly.
@channelingusllcix3512
@channelingusllcix3512 2 жыл бұрын
this freaks me out O_O
@pinkcichlid
@pinkcichlid 2 жыл бұрын
It doesn’t help when just about every doctor prescribes antibiotics for just about every illness.
@dixiewade8373
@dixiewade8373 2 жыл бұрын
Pharma should be required to develope new treatments or no more government money and taxed to the max.
@chichi3701
@chichi3701 2 жыл бұрын
@@dixiewade8373 But aren't we a capitalist society? That sounds like something China would do.
@EShirako
@EShirako 2 жыл бұрын
And parents had for years demanded antibiotics with viral infections 'because it made the kids get better', even though antibiotics do nothing for viruses of course. Pinkeye? Probably a virus but it MIGHT be a bacteria; antibiotics! Gum disease from not flossing? Antibiotics! And surface-antibiotics like Tricoslan or whatever. Tricolsan? Whatever. The one that was in Dial and all the antibiotic soaps of the 90s and oughts. Everything that made you feel bad? Insist just a bit and you got antibiotics too, because the HMO's back then wanted fastfastfast and the generic antibiotics were fast and cheap and 'harmless'! Well...I hope we all enjoyed that 'low cost' fix to our insurance woes. I know my mom was guilty of that too any time she was paranoid about how bad I felt, even for stomach flus and everything else that worried her enough. I mean, maybe one of those things she worried about may HAVE killed me if she hadn't insisted...but we were all part of this cause. Doctors do it because we insist, because the insurers lean on docs to reduce billable hours, because lobbyists want to let Big Pharma keep making its record profits, and because we LET the lobbyists remain legal to DO that stuff. It's all us. Everything else is because of us, or FOR us. The government doesn't put antibiotics in the water. And chlorine is not the same, of course! Chlorine kills everything; "equal-opportunity death" is hard to grow resistant to. Big Pharma doesn't make us take the antibiotics. The doctor can't force us to treat infections. Hospitals can't either. But we opt to live with VERY-SUPER-MINIMUM, and sure I'll take anything that might help! *I* might die from this viral infection, gimme antibiotics to save my life! I insist! Screw my kids, my neighbors, my family's future...POUR IT ON ME. All us. All of it. Welcome to the future we not only deserve, but that we paid to guarantee. We can still fix this...but remember not to get 'antibiotics on the side' for things that you don't need it for. And buy less 'factory farm' food, because that level of disgusting jam-packing necessitates ongoing antibiotics as a corporate-level thing. Not curative dosing in response to an illness, but preventive, because 100 cows per square meter leads to (surprise) unhealthy cows and lots of poop all over each other. But hey, cheap burgers! Woo! \o/ We're getting EXACTLY what we've been paying for.
@loiscase4497
@loiscase4497 11 ай бұрын
As a long retired critical care nurse, it has been known for at least 25 years that we were barreling toward the day we would have no effective antibiotics. No companies wanted to bother in investing the time and money needed to bring new antibiotics to market.
@bradcallahan3546
@bradcallahan3546 4 ай бұрын
Wow, you’re so smart,
@mauz791
@mauz791 2 ай бұрын
But how does research into antibiotics benefit the shareholders?
@lethabrooks9112
@lethabrooks9112 2 ай бұрын
Antibiotics kill the good bacteria that keeps the bad bacteria away allowing the superbugs to run rampant as well.
@melissapinol7279
@melissapinol7279 2 жыл бұрын
Poor Addi. This brings back memories. My beloved husband Jim survived cancer only to die of an untreatable bacterial infection he picked up in the the hospital. It attacked his internal organs and shut them down. He fought hard he was in the hospital for an entire year before succumbing. My heart goes out to Addis family and all families who have lost a loved one.
@Sheila612Miller
@Sheila612Miller 2 жыл бұрын
I had to comment on this. First I'm so sorry for your loss. 2nd that has to be horrible to go to hospital sick from whatever where they actually keep you to then get sicker from being there . Omg that's horrible. Most men u have to beat to get them to even go to the Dr office let alone get them to go to the hospital. I pray when I'm gone my son's pay attention to everything body related and to listen to what I've told them.
@ritamariekelley4077
@ritamariekelley4077 2 жыл бұрын
🌹💜💙
@user-zt4zr7eg6z
@user-zt4zr7eg6z Жыл бұрын
​@@Sheila612Millerin those cases the patient is already immunsupressive.
@kennethmoney3109
@kennethmoney3109 2 жыл бұрын
I quit ICU nursing after 30 years because of working so hard to keeping these people alive and watching them die. PTSD fucks yer head up. A human can only witness so much terror before you lose your mind
@theCosmicQueen
@theCosmicQueen 2 жыл бұрын
those Dr's need to branch out and learn more than the pharma co's are telling them. they need stuff that works and it already exists. Silver products for one.
@michah321
@michah321 2 жыл бұрын
You're a blessing for the work you've done and you'll do more for the world in another way. Don't feel bad about leaving the work, the work you've done is a miracle. No one asks anyone to be a soldier on the front lines forever. 30 years is a long time!! It's a war really. PTSD no doubt. Thank you for the work you've done. The medical people who took care of my family members I will never forget and I will always always be grateful.
@kennethmoney3109
@kennethmoney3109 2 жыл бұрын
@@michah321 btw my son's name is micah
@michah321
@michah321 2 жыл бұрын
@@kennethmoney3109 hey! That's cool! 😊😊😊
@mikec5400
@mikec5400 2 жыл бұрын
I wouldnt be able to live with all the poeple ive let down by quitting
@annettiespaghettie
@annettiespaghettie 2 жыл бұрын
Been there done that! I picked up MRSA in April 2017 from my dorm, had an abscess drained, went septic, hospitalized for a day, IV vancomycin, discharged the next day. Then in December 2017, I got pneumonia. Well, the MRSA that was hiding dormant in my body bloomed into a lovely necrotizing pneumonia. 13 days in the hospital, 4 in the ICU, 2 chest tubes, 1 PCA, 24 hr staggered azithromycin and Zithromax infusion, 3.5 liters of pleural effusion drained, they almost put me on a vent. Well, I fucking made it! It wasn’t easy but I’m here! I got MRSA two more times (once as an abscess on my head and once as bronchitis) until I was finally referred to an infectious disease doctor and went through a decon protocol. Haven’t had it since and hope to keep it that way!!!!!!!!!
@masonbobro3794
@masonbobro3794 2 жыл бұрын
Had MRSA as a kid but thankfully not nearly as bad as yours. They always warned us it could go dormant so we all were freaked out and overanalyzing every bump for awhile - been probably 7-10 years now though so hopefully it's gone!
@nancyjones6428
@nancyjones6428 2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting story, I'm sure you still live on the edge.
@junehitchcock170
@junehitchcock170 2 жыл бұрын
Stay well.
@annettiespaghettie
@annettiespaghettie 2 жыл бұрын
@@masonbobro3794 i hope so! Did you ever go septic with it?
@annettiespaghettie
@annettiespaghettie 2 жыл бұрын
@@nancyjones6428 thank you. Yes, I do
@Mike-og6sv
@Mike-og6sv Жыл бұрын
I keep coming back here to remember Addi. My son at 6 months of age suffered a brain aneurysm. He continues to go to therapy and doctors' appointments weekly. He has a shunt and will be turning 3 years old soon. I am grateful for my extra time with him even though he could be taken from me at any moment. It's so hard not to think about that. I imagine Addi's mother thought about too.
@Dreadtheday
@Dreadtheday 2 жыл бұрын
I was one of the first cases of aggressive MRSA. They came into my room in hazmat suits and quarantined my home. That was back in 2003. My first severe and seemingly unprovoked infection happened in my lip in 1992.. it swole up and was infected. Then I had gland infections in my sweat glands. I sat on a ring at school. Then it infected my finger. I had persistent infections until I was tested in 2003 when aggressive MRSA was diagnosed. I had infections for 18 years before seeing Dr. Robert Thomas in Michigan. I defeted it with his help. I had 400 excisions, pilonidal disease, pneumonia, marcupialization and removal of my sweat glands in several places. I contracted a complex resistant bladder infection and had to take Macrobid and 2 others. It was all pretty awful. I have been past it for many years and I still have paranoia and nightmares.
@dalecarrington7851
@dalecarrington7851 2 жыл бұрын
Omg !!!!
@alekkoomanoff7281
@alekkoomanoff7281 Жыл бұрын
But you're still here It must have been a nightmare.
@NovaLeeNation1687
@NovaLeeNation1687 Жыл бұрын
I feel for you! I contracted MRSA while deployed in Iraq back in 2006. It was a long road to recovery for me as well. I hope you’re doing ok now ❤️‍🩹
@toter-drache
@toter-drache Жыл бұрын
I had MRSA in my knee around that same time, through surgery and also intravenous antibiotics treatment they were able to get it under control and then cured over a period of 3 months. The doctors had told me that the antibiotics needed for treating MRSA were the same strength as you would find in Chemotherapy treatments. I remember that the veins where the antibiotics were administered felt like hard plastic tubing under the skin after they pulled the needle from my arm.
@NicoleM2108
@NicoleM2108 Жыл бұрын
Wow...just wow! Incredible journey. Thank you for sharing...I just could not imagine. How did you trace it to something you sat on when the symptoms manifested in your lip...especially if you probably did not think much of sitting on that ring at the time? Just curious. Please, stay well!
@hannahpumpkins4359
@hannahpumpkins4359 2 жыл бұрын
I had a MRSA/MSSA/Diphtheria infection in my thoracic spine (T9-T12). It started as a pain in my back. Then one day a week later I felt horrible, and got up from my desk (I was at home), walked 2 feet, and my legs gave out from under me. I couldn't breathe. My chest hurt, I was confused, and I had a fever of 104. I got to the hospital and was diagnosed with Sepsis. An hour later I was in the ICU. The infectious disease doctor asked me if I had any cuts on my body, and I said, "yeah, I have a small cut on my toe". A month later I was facing the possibility of having my right leg amputated... I had a heart attack from the bacteria. Ultimately I lost my right big toe, and parts of a couple others. My thoracic spine and some ribs were destroyed, and left me partially paralyzed. I had been on 14 different antibiotics for over 5 years. I was hospitalized most of that time, often in the ICU. The infection spread to my mouth, and I have had around 30 oral surgeries to fix it. At one point my infectious disease doctor came into my room and gave me the bad news: He'd never seen anyone with disease as severe as mine survive for any length of time; all have died within 5 years. It's been 7 years so far, and I can walk again, though with a limp (I cannot feel my right leg/foot), and the core of my body is still paralyzed. My mouth looks normal again. I have some cognitive problems from the septic shock (I had it 4 times), so I used to be a fast talker/thinker, and now I'm quite slow and have a hard time finding the right words in a conversation, and have problems with my memory. My team of doctors said I most likely won't live a lot longer, as they expect the bacteria to come back, and this time they're probably be resistant to everything.
@jasminakochanowicz1007
@jasminakochanowicz1007 2 жыл бұрын
Im so sorry to hear your story and I hope you can continue to define the odds and not get the bacteria back again❤
@WaqarAli-vn1zy
@WaqarAli-vn1zy 2 жыл бұрын
I am an internal medicine doctor myself and tbh no doctor can even give approximate timeline. As medicine is not maths, it’s more of an art… but one thing I must tell you from my clinical experience of 13 years; the longer you are asymptomatic, better the chances you got…
@WaqarAli-vn1zy
@WaqarAli-vn1zy 2 жыл бұрын
And your word finding difficulty is Broca’s aphasia… if you are able to speak the right word (doesn’t matter the time delay) , it means your brain connections are intact, over time it’s bound to improve… and above all my best wishes and prayer to you… get well soon
@kerrazee
@kerrazee 2 жыл бұрын
Oh my .... you have been through so much - I'm so sorry 😞
@zoeydeu2261
@zoeydeu2261 2 жыл бұрын
@Hannah I wonder if phage therapy might help prolong your life against reoccurring bacterial infections
@amandag4618
@amandag4618 2 жыл бұрын
I work in an ICU and there are still so many people who do not wear PPE correctly if at all because “they aren’t worried about it” or nurses who don’t reinforce wearing PPE to visitors. Ugh it drives me so crazy. Protect yourself and others people. It’s not hard.
@hibai8617
@hibai8617 2 жыл бұрын
I have a question.. why don’t we treat these deadly bacteria with bacteria phages? (Idk if I spelled it correctly) but if its the only option why not introduce phages to the body?
@abdulazis400
@abdulazis400 2 жыл бұрын
@@hibai8617 because bacteria phage can trigger immune response to body.
@genxx2724
@genxx2724 2 жыл бұрын
They should be kicked out. They’re putting the community at risk.
@junehitchcock170
@junehitchcock170 2 жыл бұрын
It is the wearing of watches and using their mobile phones with gloves on that gets me hopping mad! So unaware of cross contamination.
@genxx2724
@genxx2724 2 жыл бұрын
@@junehitchcock170 I think they just don’t care. They act as if the gloves are just to protect them.
@tonyjones6904
@tonyjones6904 Жыл бұрын
I'm 62 years old I am extremely compassionate person and I have never in my life been this upset watching with this little girl went through it has taken me 10 minutes to voice text what I just said through tears
@tonyjones6904
@tonyjones6904 9 ай бұрын
@@LilbigwomanN-wg4nm I don't need to lie I don't have nothing to lose
@Tadesan
@Tadesan 3 ай бұрын
Talk about tldr
@seanohelan8241
@seanohelan8241 2 жыл бұрын
If Addi's Mom ever reads this I just wanted to say you are the most wonderful mother, woman and communicator. I am so sorry for your loss, heaven has a new and radiant angel.
@aliensoup2420
@aliensoup2420 2 жыл бұрын
As frightening as this is, it is amazing that most of us go through life so casually, experiencing scrapes and cuts, and exposing ourselves to potentially dangerous conditions, with no consequences. It is astounding that the millions of people living in horribly unsanitary environments such as the slums in India, are not dropping like flies. As a child I swam or waded through stagnant water ponds, and suffered cuts from barbed wire fences, yet only until reaching 60 did the odds finally catch up, when I caught a staph infection from exposure to sewer water from a backed-up shower drain. I had the typical puss filled boils on the skin, and eventually developed cellulitis in 1 leg. 3 injections and 5 weeks of several oral antibiotics appears to have knocked it out. It was a big wake-up, and I am much more conscientious about treating minor cuts and scrapes, disinfect my hands while out in public, and quit hand-shake greetings. Reports like this program make me deathly afraid of hospitals.
@BritishMoralHQ
@BritishMoralHQ 2 жыл бұрын
my bet is to try a garlic powder on bacteria .... and let garlic challenge bacteria genocide against any ungodly man made snake oil....
@singmysong1167
@singmysong1167 2 жыл бұрын
@@BritishMoralHQ ...interesting. I know that I used to have sinus infections yearsa ago until I started taking odor-free garlic capsules regularly... because I learned that garlic is a natural antibiotic, etc.
@syasyaishavingfun
@syasyaishavingfun 2 жыл бұрын
Human are resilient!
@babagandu
@babagandu 2 жыл бұрын
Garlic, apple cider vinegar, cloves, and honey. Cannabis oil also.
@xponen
@xponen 2 жыл бұрын
After 30-ish years of age every damage will be permanent so no more playing around. There won't be an aging population in a slum because they won't survive it. In third world countries the median (majority) age is around 30year old.
@jamesu3346
@jamesu3346 2 жыл бұрын
I knew overused antibiotics were an issue, especially in farming/feeding issues, but this may be one of the scariest documenaries I have ever seen.
@TurtleRhythm
@TurtleRhythm Жыл бұрын
I will never forget the substitute teacher's words to our science class before we watched a movie "if you go into a hospital, make sure you ask how well they prevent Mrsa" I don't know what led him to tell us this advice to a group of high schoolers, but I still think about it to this day 😢 sad to all those who died and are still fighting antibiotic resistant bacteria
@rkeutzer
@rkeutzer 9 ай бұрын
I had a double mastectomy with reconstruction and acquired a surgical site infection due to the plastic surgeon's horrific job of closing me up. Ten days after the surgery, I went to the ER because my wounds were hot, purlent, and red. The Dr's and nurses were horrified at the hack job, took a sample for the lab, cleaned, packed, and debrided the wounds and rebandaged me properly. They put in a hep-port and started me on sulpha-meth, but when the lab results came back as MRSA w/ necrotizing fasciitis, I was bumped up to vanco. After they were able to get the necrotizing fasciitis under control, they switched me back to sulpha meth for SEVEN MONTHS as the wounds granulated new skin. I was then taken off of the abx, and then MRSA cysts began growing all over my body. That was SIX years ago, and I still live with an active MRSA infection. So, take it from me, MRSA is no laughing matter.
@marshadrane8778
@marshadrane8778 2 жыл бұрын
My Daughter went to have an operation and ended up with a bacterial infection that made her worse then before she had the operation... The antibiotics they gave her were over a thousand dollars...She got them and it finally got better, but she suffered for months... I'm just thankful to God she's still here today...
@isimonsez
@isimonsez 2 жыл бұрын
thank medicine not the imaginary sky genie
@psycho6542
@psycho6542 2 жыл бұрын
You should be thanking the medical staff at that hospital
@xxxsaraHelloxxx
@xxxsaraHelloxxx Жыл бұрын
@@isimonsez intelligent design. Read it. There’s proof everywhere of the sky genie🧐🕊
@deliafredericks7578
@deliafredericks7578 Жыл бұрын
​@@isimonsez you obviously dont have any Faith in God Even believe He exist But He does The Hand of God is overwhelming Praise Him and Him only God work in mysterious ways
@leoross5777
@leoross5777 Жыл бұрын
all these 'resistant viruses were man made. in a lab . and released purposely . follow the money
@danielhillwick8430
@danielhillwick8430 2 жыл бұрын
There was a time that I was doing remodel work in a hospital. One I morning woke with 106 temperature. I went to the emergency room immediately and they couldn't figure out what was wrong. It was 6 days before they found out that I contracted legionnaires disease. Hospitals are dangerous places! Don't ever take them for granted
@touchofgrey5372
@touchofgrey5372 2 жыл бұрын
It's a place to die in! Literary!
@cullanpadroclum
@cullanpadroclum 2 жыл бұрын
My grandfather got legeionaiires from taking a shower at John's Hopkins. Almost died a few times. It's fuckin scary dude
@zoeydeu2261
@zoeydeu2261 2 жыл бұрын
Legionnaires can occur anywhere where the bacteria can spread through mist: such as from air-conditioning units for large buildings, shower heads, toilets, etc. It's not just at hospitals - my local mall had an outbreak that killed a few elderly shoppers.
@nancyjones6428
@nancyjones6428 2 жыл бұрын
There are so many noscomial infections in hospitals and it is getting worse
@akanta5746
@akanta5746 2 жыл бұрын
6 days????? man, i would sue the shit out of that hospital. Legionnaires is absolutely no joke, and you're extremely lucky to be alive if you went 6 days without anitibotics. That is incompetence at the highest level
@KSun-yq1yp
@KSun-yq1yp 2 жыл бұрын
Such a beautiful young girl and an incredibly strong mother. The mothers intuition was just amazing to me. Shes a nurse too.. knowing all the tiny details her daughter would be put through must have been just.. terrible. I wish nothing but the best for the mother and may Addie's soul rest easy. She was a fighter.
@scottymccurry680
@scottymccurry680 2 жыл бұрын
Everyone of are amazing I'm driven to tears on the magnitude of these circumstances
@theCosmicQueen
@theCosmicQueen 2 жыл бұрын
she's dumb though. not aware , she puts her daughter's pills directly on the table where other things have sat, unthinking. they should go on a saucer that is known to be clean. Not where a grocery bag sat or her purse . the bottom of a purse is FILTHY and germy. she didn't seek anything outside the Dr's office for her daughter. there is a LOT of knowledge and help outside that kind of conventional Dr's. they have a very narrow field of expertise and a lot is left out. Stupid commercial big pharma artificial antibiotics, of course they don't work very well. OTHER THINGS CAN. but those are not pushed by pharma co's because they can't make a ton of bucks off em. dr's look in a book full of Big Pharma toxic crap, that's all they usually do. At least the allopathic " conventional" Dr's. There is a ton that they do not know.
@jenniraisovna5698
@jenniraisovna5698 2 жыл бұрын
Did she pass away? In the video, she survived, but was unsure about the update. Indeed, what an exemplary story of careful we must be and how grateful we should be for every gifted moment in this life.
@parisbest105
@parisbest105 2 жыл бұрын
💕🙏 💕
@Lin-rh6qs
@Lin-rh6qs 2 жыл бұрын
@@jenniraisovna5698 she died 8 years after the surgery at 20, her body started to reject her new lungs and she made the choice not to go back on the transplant list. So sad, but she did so much in those 8 years.
@luuvis
@luuvis Жыл бұрын
My deepest condolences to Addi’s loved ones. My daughter died Dec 1st 2012. From sepsis of unknown etiology they knew it was a bacteria but they couldn’t tell what kind, she went into cardiac arrest on Nov 26, 2012 and it died with her. I’ll always wonder what happened to her. She was fine. She died 2 days later.
@consuelopulici2354
@consuelopulici2354 Жыл бұрын
🙏
@odarrien
@odarrien Жыл бұрын
Wow. Condolences to you. 13 years later and I'm sure you think of her every day.
@luuvis
@luuvis Жыл бұрын
@@odarrien I think of her every second of my life. Thanks for your kind comment.
@CatholicGaming
@CatholicGaming Жыл бұрын
I will pray a Hail Mary for you and your family! What a terrible tragedy! My heart goes out to you!
@JohnnyXanax
@JohnnyXanax Жыл бұрын
My condolences to you. Could you kindly elaborate on her case, specifically on pathology reports. Was her blood tested more thoroughly. Heart failure can happen by bacterial/viral infections. Was she hospitalized on her last days. I do a lot of case studies for medical journals and health institutions.. Thank you.
@Hollister74
@Hollister74 2 жыл бұрын
My mom had a surgery to fix her back, while in the hospital.she developed MRSA. They took out all the hardware, she had to heal from the inside out and had to wear a pump that pumped medication directly into her heart for months. It took her over a year to heal and it nearly killed her. She was never the same after.
@louise9973
@louise9973 2 жыл бұрын
The last few minutes with Addi and her mum was lovely. Her mum really loves her and what a mum. She's awesome.
@raven4k998
@raven4k998 2 жыл бұрын
well the solution is simple but they still won't do it genetic engineered enhancements for peoples immune systems since they have no other option beef up a persons disease resistance
@alicecuriosityoftenleadsto6288
@alicecuriosityoftenleadsto6288 2 жыл бұрын
@@raven4k998 That is nowhere near simple. If you 'beef up' a persons immune system too much it begins to attack the person itself, causing Sepsis, disabling conditions and more. Believe me, I should know. Its almost killed me a few times. Look up 'autoimmune disorders'. That's what happens when a persons immune system is OVERACTIVE. Its a very delicate balance.
@JDJoeil
@JDJoeil Жыл бұрын
@@raven4k998 well lmao. this is real life and not a fantasy movie. gene editing is a very new field.
@raven4k998
@raven4k998 Жыл бұрын
@@JDJoeil yeah and when it can stop old age by repairing ones dna to make them young again or keep them young then it will be fun times
@JDJoeil
@JDJoeil Жыл бұрын
​@@raven4k998 you're just rambling about stuff you've clearly no idea about. again, this is real life and not a sci-fi/fantasy movie.
@krokodyl1927
@krokodyl1927 2 жыл бұрын
I give my sincerest gratitude to Addie, her mom, David, and all others involved in bringing to light information about these super bugs. Incredible sadness overcame me when at the very end of this upload, finding out that Addie had lost her battle and had passed. Rest in peace sweet pea. 😢🤗
@kiapanthistledown9453
@kiapanthistledown9453 Жыл бұрын
I'm sure I won't live to see it, but I sure hope that we rediscover our ability to love our neighbor enough to demand that we all be provided full health care that isn't based on some bottom line. It's not a bad thing to recognize that things like our health, and lights and power, and education should be handled by compassion, and not greed.
@c.m.4720
@c.m.4720 Жыл бұрын
Your comment should be at the very top of the list. You express this perfectly. Its true. We need to not think of this in terms of impersonal masses of people but in OUR Neighbors, those we love, those we see and interact with every day. The nice woman at the gas station who always asks about your grandmother. The crossing guard who has waved at you with a friendly smile every weekday morning for 8 years. The neighbor next door who found your lost dog and returned her home. These are not nameless faceless masses, they are the building blocks of our daily lives and deserve to have the basics of life.
@Jesusismyguide1
@Jesusismyguide1 Жыл бұрын
Amen!
@jamsauce8012
@jamsauce8012 Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately it won’t matter. This is Mother Nature acting against human overpopulation. Natural selection doesn’t care how much we beg and cry.
@Jesusismyguide1
@Jesusismyguide1 Жыл бұрын
@@jamsauce8012 it has nothing to do with Mother Nature and natural selection due to overpopulation! China and India are over populated however not many West countries are. There is what is called a negative birth rate. As the population is aging out there are not enough being born to replace them, which is causing a problem
@eljanrimsa5843
@eljanrimsa5843 Жыл бұрын
I'm with you in general, but in the case of resistance I think we need to become more humble and admit that we reach limits where we can't overcome infections anymore like we used to two generations ago.
@goodgollymissmolly1970
@goodgollymissmolly1970 2 жыл бұрын
I would love to see a documentary on the myriad of bacteria that live in our body with a focus on how a proper environment keeps them balanced.
@charon7320
@charon7320 2 жыл бұрын
it's irrelevant in this context, it's about artificially enhanced bacteria that are a by-product of medical procedures. it has nothing to do with natural biology, bacteria, and how our body works.
@naomihoriuchi7592
@naomihoriuchi7592 2 жыл бұрын
@@charon7320 it has everything to do with those things you just listed. “Medical procedures” as you say, don’t “artificially” create the bacteria. They have evolved this resistance due to us killing them off. It is the basic process of evolution - just being influenced by antibiotics. Think about a mouse that is born faster and can escape predators better than other mice - those mice will die but the fast one lives and has offspring that carry it’s speedy gene. Then the trait gets passed down and is selected for because those faster mice survive more often. It’s the same with the bacteria - they naturally change genetically over time, so this resistance gene popped up on its own - it’s the fact that we are able to wipe out the non-resistant bacteria that allows the resistant ones to proliferate and persist, rather than just being a one-off. Point being, it is exactly having to do with natural biology and bacteria.
@thersten
@thersten 2 жыл бұрын
Frontline......always timely, always quality journalism, always thorough, and always scaring the bajesus out of it's viewers for nearly 30 years ! 😱
@Freedomrose1
@Freedomrose1 2 жыл бұрын
I love the way they just let you Figure out what they really trying to say . Read between the Iines. And Frontline has All Kinds of deniability when the " conspiracy theorists" prove to be just be ON POINT . Bravo! Good Journalism
@christinafidance340
@christinafidance340 2 жыл бұрын
@@Freedomrose1 I dunno man. Think it’s just you. Once you put on that tin foil hat, you can find some bu!!sh!t in damn near ANYTHING. Hell, I bet you can see some serious sh!t playing out when you watch an episode of Sesame Street too, huh?
@Freedomrose1
@Freedomrose1 2 жыл бұрын
@@christinafidance340 it's time to wake up honey. this vaccine trial b******* May may help someone out may help certain people out but I am definitely not one that it benefits because I'm healthy I am white that's right I am white and I am strong. some because of their inability to absorb vitamin D and the way that it needs to be absorbed for whatever reason, obesity, Color of skin , elderly , youth, chronic illness, whatever the reason for the decrease in vitamin D, some are not as fortunate. Some may benefit with a vaccine. Im not sure. But the Risk out weighs the benifit in my case. And in several others to be vaccinated/rather than treating the virus. Mandate iAbsolutely not., helping you or me. It is only causing a reaction that equals to what they are look King to achieve. Money- And only the Rich have Power. And Add Bitcoin.. out of thier control. .... Little people like me and you - If they are smart! ---- Well We understand and see the shift in Wealth alread. Myself......I Am already holding more money than ever since Oct 2020.. And guess What!? Not for me....../My legacy-. . . my grand babies.......I will not sit and accept-free shit_for. freedom. Because I Am not LAZY . Don't get me wrong. I'm tired. But Nobody Rides for Free!
@hostronic
@hostronic 2 жыл бұрын
@@Freedomrose1 lmao good luck with that when Omicron finds you.
@justthetruth2662
@justthetruth2662 2 жыл бұрын
but its better to be informed then lost in the clouds
@matthew-jy5jp
@matthew-jy5jp 2 жыл бұрын
Best journalism on tv today. Thank PBS and frontline. May the world never stop supporting the Endowment for the Arts and the Endowment for the humanities
@patmurray8265
@patmurray8265 2 жыл бұрын
I agree. I've introduced my partner to it and she's from France. She'd never heard of it. Today? She can't miss a new episode. Great journalism for sure.
@adriansullivan7629
@adriansullivan7629 2 жыл бұрын
Amen.
@krotchlickmeugh627
@krotchlickmeugh627 2 жыл бұрын
They push alot of propaganda. But ok
@coshyno
@coshyno 2 жыл бұрын
@@krotchlickmeugh627 totally agree and its sad most people are so gullible they don't even see it.
@krotchlickmeugh627
@krotchlickmeugh627 2 жыл бұрын
@@coshyno its disgusting. But you gotta look at the commenters profiles. They are k farm bots.
@odarrien
@odarrien Жыл бұрын
Addis's story made me so emotional. I'm happy the doctors decided to go ahead with the lung transplant. 8 years of life is an incredible gift under such dire circumstances and she seems to have used hers well to live fully. Condolences to all her family and friends. These types of infections are so frightening.
@ItsHaiCat
@ItsHaiCat 2 жыл бұрын
As a researcher who works in both microbiology and cancer, it is heart breaking every time one of our patients come to a point where treatment cannot be made anymore. To everyone who has not studied microbiology/immunology or worked in the medical field, please understand that we are trying our best in our respective research field. Each time a researcher works on a research, 1000s of hours spend in the lab, reading papers, and sharing information with countless other researchers to only contributes 1% to that field. It may not be now, or a 100 year later but eventually, we can come to a point where we can relieve symptoms and treat every disease. That is my wish as a research, to the countless hours in front of an incubator, microscope, and laptop, we will get there one day. Don't give up. :) Have hope.
@Si74l0rd
@Si74l0rd 2 жыл бұрын
The best field to research is bacteriophage, and potentially using CRISPR edits to make unique bacteriophage for an individual. In the early nineties I visited a lab at University College London where they were computer modeling potential antibiotics, and even then the problem was that there was almost nothing in the pipeline that wasn't massively toxic and dangerous to humans. It's a field that has been pretty much exhausted and that was thirty years ago. While I appreciate science likes to think it will find all the answers, sometimes the answer isn't found in chemistry but in biology. By using the natural predator of the bacteria in question. In Georgia in the former USSR bacteriophage is the standard treatment. You swallow a fly, and follow it with a spider in essence. In the same way a parasitic virus infects our cells, the right bacteriophage for your bacteria will do the same thing. No profit in it though, still interested?
@adyarym
@adyarym 2 жыл бұрын
I can’t give you enough likes!!!!!
@LifestyleDJ
@LifestyleDJ Жыл бұрын
Sadly Big Pharma has way too much power on what medicines come to light
@OmmerSyssel
@OmmerSyssel Жыл бұрын
It's rather shocking and depressing such a highly qualified person is ignoring the basic fact that the primary reason for widespread MRSA issues is the absurd abuse of feeding healthy pigs with Antibiotics! You should be aware of this deadly dangerous habit and spread information along with heavy criticism of the careless agricultural sector! In Europe every one is aware of this problematic and some countries, like the Netherlands are fighting MRSA efficiently.
@ItsHaiCat
@ItsHaiCat Жыл бұрын
@@OmmerSyssel There are multiple ways MRSA spread, not just from pigs. And you should treat researchers with more respect because they put 100% of effort into all the work that they do even if failure is inevitable. Many of us lock ourselves in a tiny room for months to work on a project that may only fail. Note; if you want to spread awareness, it should come from you spreading by word of mouth or internet now days because there is nothing greater then the power of voice.
@Papario1113
@Papario1113 Жыл бұрын
Devastating to hear Addi passed away aged 20. What a beautiful soul she is! A Wonderful mother too? You're a warrior Mum. So young, so unfair. This young woman showed more courage and dignity than I've seen in a long time. Fly free Addi, your light still shines bright on this world.
@A2dy
@A2dy 2 жыл бұрын
As a researcher in AMR THANK YOU Frontline for bringing this to the public's attention!
@sharonward4766
@sharonward4766 Жыл бұрын
I can not imagine what you have had to watch your precious child go through! We had a child born with non adrenal glands. He is now 58 and has medical issues but he is still alive! Bless your heart! You are so amazing.
@calevy7099
@calevy7099 2 жыл бұрын
Love to Addie and to all who endure such challenges. May she rest in peace. ❤️
@marymastromauro8164
@marymastromauro8164 2 жыл бұрын
This show is truly an eye opener! Its very scary to think a tiny cut on your hand can turn deadly with no help from antibiotics.
@eljanrimsa5843
@eljanrimsa5843 Жыл бұрын
That has been the case for hundreds of thousands years since humans existed. Only in the last 80 years it had been different, and only in the more affluent parts of the planet. But we also understand microorganisms evolve fast enough to survive every particular medication we use in the long run.
@carolzhou6693
@carolzhou6693 2 жыл бұрын
This excellent documentary shows us why we need to develop bacteriophage therapies--and the public sector needs to lead the way!
@samreynolds3789
@samreynolds3789 2 жыл бұрын
FEW Sheeple RESEARCH / READ ! 😥
@xponen
@xponen 2 жыл бұрын
bacteriophage only solve a specific bacteria infection, it is not as magical as taking antibiotic pills; one has to test and identify the infecting bacteria before getting a species of bacteriophage to cure it, so it seems to be something for intensive care or hospital settings not to general public in clinics or pharmacy.
@carterpavloski9276
@carterpavloski9276 2 жыл бұрын
The private sector is better!!
@junglecat_rant
@junglecat_rant 2 жыл бұрын
@@carterpavloski9276 They are a Do-nothing domain.
@abelsoo5465
@abelsoo5465 2 жыл бұрын
@@carterpavloski9276 It depends. None is better than the other. Public sector can afford to think and plan for projects with longer term pay-off than the private sector which need to ensure quarterly profitability. Case in point, space exploration. There was NASA before SpaceX.
@Nurse66
@Nurse66 Жыл бұрын
I worked in geriatric nursing…I had a CNA come to work one day with her armpit bleeding…I asked her what was wrong…she said she had a sore under her arm…I had seen MRSA before…I put on gloves and protective gear and looked at it in the restroom…I immediately recognised it!!! I told her to go clock out and go to the er for treatment…It’s very contagious and they missed at least a week of work so they got to where they were working and trying to hide it…I hated to but I had to take all my CNA’S in the med room and check them for sores…I sent many home crying because they couldn’t afford to miss work but they didn’t realise how SERIOUS it was!! I caught it eventually myself!!!😢😢😢😢❤❤❤❤❤
@paintedwings74
@paintedwings74 7 ай бұрын
Wow. This is what argues for ALL medical personnel, including the lowest-paid, to have full health insurance with no copays and paid sick leave. I would not want to have someone caring for me that was deliberately hiding an illness simply because they couldn't afford to take time off work!
@cyang7850
@cyang7850 2 ай бұрын
🫂
@lethabrooks9112
@lethabrooks9112 2 ай бұрын
Former CNA here and MRSA was always our biggest enemy so to speak.
@vonschweringen8321
@vonschweringen8321 2 жыл бұрын
MRSA and sepsis nearly killed me 10 years ago. It was very difficult to get under control. It was a brutal experience.
@Robert_McGarry_Poems
@Robert_McGarry_Poems 2 жыл бұрын
I watched a doc on this skin eating bacteria when I was in my teens. I didn't think it was prevalent in the environment...I met this older gentleman in my twenties, he had the exact same thing happen to him. Brushed against some rusted piece of metal, paid no attention to it. His leg, at the thigh, has a fist sized hole in it. Where they had to carve it out. While in the hospital, he contracted MRSA. Because they were already treating him for the skin bacteria he was too weak to treat. It got into his blood. Eventually, it didn't kill him, he recovered. However, every once in a while, he would have a wound that didn't heal. It was interesting to have known him, honestly if not a little awkward seeing his wounds. That is a reality that he showed me exists...
@vonschweringen8321
@vonschweringen8321 2 жыл бұрын
@@Robert_McGarry_Poems yeah it's no joke; some of these bugs can't be treated. But a never ending flesh eating bacteria oh man... I got pneumonia from inhaling some of my own vomit during a seizure; it quickly turned MRSA and got into my blood. All my organs failed but my heart didn't. I'm very fortunate to be alive.
@myyoutubestuff5112
@myyoutubestuff5112 2 жыл бұрын
Ya my cousin is a nurse her husband had skin eating bacteria. They had to cut it all off before it spread
@fuzzytigercat
@fuzzytigercat 2 жыл бұрын
You should have taken Oregano oils pills. They will kill any kind of bacteria, virus, yeast, fungus. Take at least 5 pills 3 times a day for a week.
@BoatLoadsofDope
@BoatLoadsofDope 2 жыл бұрын
@@fuzzytigercat stop spreading quackery. Reported.
@mrp1924
@mrp1924 2 жыл бұрын
Perplexing why the government doesn’t fund the research, thanks frontline for another great documentary
@bodombeastmode
@bodombeastmode 2 жыл бұрын
Because braindead Republicans think that's socialism .
@Robert_McGarry_Poems
@Robert_McGarry_Poems 2 жыл бұрын
@@bodombeastmode We just need to start interviewing them outside their sick children's hospital rooms. Should do the trick...
@acaaew
@acaaew 2 жыл бұрын
@@bodombeastmode it’s not just the Republicans, it’s our entire elected government that swims in unlimited campaign contributions. They are all bribed but the republicans are just the most brazen because they will accept cash from anyone that will hand it to them. That’s why they have the balls to say that 98% of the scientific community is full of it when it comes to climate change and their okay with the government controlling medical decisions for a woman’s body but we better not ever pass any legislation to help stop another mass school shooting. They can sure be evil little dicks but unfortunately when it comes to money from the medical and pharmaceutical industry, both sides are all balls deep in it.
@rabidbigdog
@rabidbigdog 2 жыл бұрын
The food industry would never allow their purchased politicians to stop them feeding antibiotics to food animals.
@SirNic4180
@SirNic4180 2 жыл бұрын
They don't care
@derickmc1
@derickmc1 2 жыл бұрын
This should be a wake-up call to all governments of the world - Antibiotic research needs public funds invested in it as a matter of priority! We also need serious legislative restrictions on the flagrant overuse of antibiotics currently.
@pamelaporter4750
@pamelaporter4750 2 жыл бұрын
Derick Mc, You're not suggesting that politicians interfere with doctors' practicing medicine, are you? Most of us trust physicians' opinions over lawmakers' any day.
@derickmc1
@derickmc1 2 жыл бұрын
@@pamelaporter4750 Yes unfortunately I am saying that Doctors must be stopped from giving out antibiotics for sniffles, colds, etc. They must be kept as a nuclear option only, or one day we won’t have any that work.
@andrewweaver2517
@andrewweaver2517 2 жыл бұрын
Regulation isn't going to do much. The issue lay within the towns in India that produce these antibiotics. The run off from these facilities goes into the environment and creates these super bugs. The other side of the coin is the weaponization of them as well. I agree with you that better utilization of current antibiotics are needed. But a political bill isn't going to stop the source issue.
@chobblegobbler2536
@chobblegobbler2536 2 жыл бұрын
We do not prescribe antibiotics, “flagrantly” it’s a life saving tool and we never stop studying them.
@scottcharney1091
@scottcharney1091 2 жыл бұрын
And phage therapy!
@tiffany3294
@tiffany3294 Жыл бұрын
It astounds me when people can't believe that our medical knowledge and abilities only go so far
@jeremyhlavenka6257
@jeremyhlavenka6257 2 жыл бұрын
I have a two year old son and stuff like this freaks me out and hate being a parent. You do all you can for them but there's so many parents that lose their children to horrible incidents that you have no control over.
@krotchlickmeugh627
@krotchlickmeugh627 2 жыл бұрын
Freaking out about something you have no control over. Will make you ruin his immune system and force him to not live his life or experience childhood. Once you have another kid youll realize you have become a parent nazi and youll completely neglect the second child. It will make him think you hate him.
@calamitynatalie8590
@calamitynatalie8590 2 жыл бұрын
@@krotchlickmeugh627 Lol, calm down bud
@abelsoo5465
@abelsoo5465 2 жыл бұрын
I had fell down and get cuts for umpteen times. I nearly drowned in a swimming pool at age 10 when my muscles cramped. I had swam in river water. I had drank water from the river. I was pierced with a pencil by a bully at school. I had fell on my back on a flight of concrete stairs and I can feel my coccyx, skull and vertebrae were hit with a bang. I once fell into a drain deeper than my height when I was riding a bicycle. I had also rolled down a slope and almost hit on rocky surface. I wonder how after all that shit I am still alive now at age 31. Maybe I am just incredibly lucky.
@danielmarkelski7177
@danielmarkelski7177 2 жыл бұрын
Please update this episode to reflect that Addie Rerecich passed away on December 2019. Her body rejected her lungs and she declined to have another double lung transplant. She died at home on December 30, 2019 surrounded by her family and friends. She was just 20 years old.
@jht3fougifh393
@jht3fougifh393 2 жыл бұрын
This is, unfortunately, pretty standard for lung transplants. Seems like, at least. I know someone who died after having it (they had CF, though). Very tragic.
@carolkristian1146
@carolkristian1146 2 жыл бұрын
I went into septic shock from a kleb infection in my kidneys. I was fine one minute and passed out on the floor the next. The doctor who treated me saved my life. I recovered after months of IV antibiotics. I'm lucky to be alive. To this day, I have no idea how I contracted it.
@victoriapowell100
@victoriapowell100 Жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry for the loss of your daughter. I'm just glad you were able to have the time with her that you did. She's up in heaven healthy and smiling down on you. God bless.
@june2420111
@june2420111 2 жыл бұрын
We should push for changes in the law. Hospitals should be forced to report those outbreaks to the public. We have a right to know, so new patients can avoid those hospitals. And yes, they should have closed the hospital temporarily at least, until the outbreak was under control or at least until they knew where it was spreading.
@krotchlickmeugh627
@krotchlickmeugh627 2 жыл бұрын
More government has never, in the history of man. Been the answer to anything.
@mdjay1000
@mdjay1000 2 жыл бұрын
Agree. My father contracted MRSA after bypass surgery and was in the hospital for 2+ months. Luckily, he survived but fast forward 4 years later another person in my family contracted MRSA in the same hospital.
@FaceFcuk
@FaceFcuk 2 жыл бұрын
@@mdjay1000 news flash MRSA lives in every hospital.
@angelachouinard4581
@angelachouinard4581 2 жыл бұрын
@@FaceFcuk That and other bugs too.
@barrybbenson1368
@barrybbenson1368 2 жыл бұрын
@@krotchlickmeugh627 You walked away from a documentary about how no for-profit company wants to develop antibiotics anymore because they're not profitable, and the only reason research is still being done today being from government subsidies, with this opinion? I have a bridge to sell you.
@ItsaRomethingeveryday
@ItsaRomethingeveryday 2 жыл бұрын
A person doesn't realize how much they take life for granted until these kinds of circumstances occur,
@sunnysmiles8211
@sunnysmiles8211 2 жыл бұрын
You are so correct.
@heatherstewart9300
@heatherstewart9300 2 жыл бұрын
Addi was SUCH a total sweetheart and a true blessing to every life she touched, and continues to even now. She's in such a better place now, just waiting to see all her loved ones again when it's their time to join her. Incredibly touching and informative documentary. Thank you Frontline, and much gratitude to Addi and her family for sharing their journey, pains, and triumphs.
@lilgumby810
@lilgumby810 Жыл бұрын
This is very interesting. My husband just died from this but his situation was different, the hospital didn't test his blood for the best antibiotics to treat my husband they ended up overdosing him on IV antibiotics till he went into kidney and liver failure. They tried to say it was from his infection but I got the doctor to admit he didn't test the blood for the antibiotics that were responding to the infection. They didn't allow him to shower for weeks in the hospital they asked to do a pick line and the more I get information learning the more I learn they literally didn't do anything to save him and these were things I didn't know trying to learn everything I could. My heart is so broken because the way the hospital treated him was cruel and inhumane, I cannot get over how the hospital mistreated him going against his wishes and intentionally causing harm to end his life after not doing the basic treatment for his condition in the first place it's devastating and cruel. I truly wish I let him die at home it's what he was trying to do in the first place but I was so scared to loose him I would of done anything to save his life but didn't realize how badly he'd be treated how much worse they could make things on him.
@kellymurphy6642
@kellymurphy6642 Жыл бұрын
Sry for your loss
@rinalore
@rinalore Жыл бұрын
🇺🇸USA💊BigPharma's🎩BigGovernment💩$BS$!
@cherub73au
@cherub73au Жыл бұрын
Incredibly sorry for your loss. You have been robbed. I'm sorry your husband and you have endured this level of negligence and incompetence. This is devastating. Please accept my deepest condolences. I hope you get to the truth you are seeking and it finally gives you some peace.
@carial69
@carial69 Жыл бұрын
I am sorry for your loss. That's a terrible way to lose someone. I lost both my parents under similar circumstances. My husband died, but not due to any medical intervention. Personally, I steer clear of all things pharmacutical and all things medical. It's all just going south. You did everything you knew to do at the time, that is all any of us can do. Forgive yourself, and try to push forward. You must live on and be happy, he would have wanted that for you, right? Right. hugs
@miltonhollis703
@miltonhollis703 Жыл бұрын
I ❤️ give my Condolences 🙏 too For losing your Husband..I can tell You had such a deep love ❤️ for your Husband..
@community1949
@community1949 2 жыл бұрын
My god what a horrible thing for that little girl and her mother to go through. I worked in a medical library in a midwest city hospital and I have never heard of some of the pathogens they are talking about. What a nightmare.
@francisphillips53
@francisphillips53 2 жыл бұрын
I think I read somewhere that little girl died later.. horrific. So sorry for her mom.
@krotchlickmeugh627
@krotchlickmeugh627 2 жыл бұрын
@@francisphillips53 she had a lung transplant and then contracted tuberculosis.
@samreynolds3789
@samreynolds3789 2 жыл бұрын
Did You READ the BOOKS there ?
@moiraatkinson
@moiraatkinson 2 жыл бұрын
@@samreynolds3789 she died at 20.
@angelasieg5099
@angelasieg5099 2 жыл бұрын
I have had MRSA pneumonia 3x the last time it spread to MRSA sepsis I was in the hospital for weeks it took a full year to recover I consider myself extremely lucky I did
@depressed_weighted_B1anket
@depressed_weighted_B1anket 2 жыл бұрын
You're blessed 🙌🏾 😇
@drejlangseth2579
@drejlangseth2579 2 жыл бұрын
As a now retired Public Health RN & Educator, I'm numb learning of yet another tragedy of what happens after critical subjects are omitted from, and teacher salaries stagnated in American Public Schools' K-8 core curriculum: basic First Aid, basic anatomy & biology (+sex ed), and societal civics/govt. finance. The world has been paying the price exponentially since the Sixties.
@arnowisp6244
@arnowisp6244 2 жыл бұрын
Sex Ed? Last I checked it was taught in full force with added pornography as "teaching aids". But removing Basic first aid is moronic.
@BJones-dg6nj
@BJones-dg6nj 2 жыл бұрын
What?
@marianhunt8899
@marianhunt8899 2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely. You are 100% correct!
@boromirofmiddleearth557
@boromirofmiddleearth557 2 жыл бұрын
true, very true. Proper hygiene, and cleaning one's cell phone! More fresh air more sunshine, more time outside. Have you heard of ozone therapy? It was used with great success in the 1930s with great success before antibiotics.
@Karen-hz7zu
@Karen-hz7zu Жыл бұрын
I couldn't imagine getting my leg, or anything sawed off. He is an angel going to help kids he is a blessed young man
@John-ix5rl
@John-ix5rl 2 жыл бұрын
I'm a retired RN and have been in and out of the hospital many times in the past few years. Without going into details people come in and out of your room with a running swipe at a foam dispenser with most of it running down the wall. I am shocked that this technique has replaced hand washing which still only as good as the person using either attempt at cleanliness. And secondly, did I hear right, the drug company needs to think of their 'portfolios'? Worried about profit? What are you leaving this life with? God bless that young lady!
@Si74l0rd
@Si74l0rd 2 жыл бұрын
With regards to hand sanitizer people don't seem to realise there are bacteria that it doesn't kill, so it's no replacement for proper hand washing. My son had norovirus 3 times in the last year, from people at school using hand sanitizer in place of hand washing before eating. Clostridium difficile and norovirus are entirely unaffected by hand sanitizer, and both will make you wish you'd washed your hands!
@GalacticNovaOverlord
@GalacticNovaOverlord 2 жыл бұрын
Keep supporting capitalism and this is the system you get- at all levels of society and civilization
@wakingcharade
@wakingcharade 2 жыл бұрын
you'd think this pandemic would teach us something about what we can do if we throw ourselves into medical research as a global community and how vulnerable we are if we don't but I guess not
@trix1227
@trix1227 2 жыл бұрын
Same thing goes for vaccinations if you know what I mean
@KellJell
@KellJell 2 жыл бұрын
My beautiful aunt passed away in 2007 due to a hospital aquired MRSA infection. I'm an RN and have been for 20 years, and these bugs are everywhere and we are very quickly reaching this point where we have no options for treatment.
@julietterose1619
@julietterose1619 5 ай бұрын
Few minutes in I'm already crying. Seeing children so sick makes me so incredibly sad.
@StopWhining491
@StopWhining491 2 жыл бұрын
I once had a dr who never tested me for a bacterial infection but always prescribed antibiotics. I never took them because of my concern over resistant bacteria. I'm not a doctor but so far haven't regretted my decisions.
@MissTrinidad
@MissTrinidad 2 жыл бұрын
🤢
@aldeno8055
@aldeno8055 2 жыл бұрын
Doctors usually over prescribe antibiotics as a CYU (cover your a**) because if patients weren’t given antibiotics and they got a bacterial infection they’ll write a negative review at best (doctors can’t defend themselves cuz HIPPA) or might go to the hospital and get seriously sick. Most of the time patients don’t need them, but they don’t want to hear “tough it out”.
@KEWONZOR
@KEWONZOR 2 жыл бұрын
This is why I don't go to the f ing doctors anymore, the solution to every problem is "let's prescribe you some beautiful antibiotics "
@MissTrinidad
@MissTrinidad 2 жыл бұрын
@@KEWONZOR relax Neanderthal sheesh 🙄
@KEWONZOR
@KEWONZOR 2 жыл бұрын
@@MissTrinidad trolls 🙄
@mdb1239
@mdb1239 2 жыл бұрын
I remember a friend of mine. She was 14 beautiful, friendly, vibrant, fun. She caught meningitis and within a week, perhaps days she was gone. Unbelievable shock. She was just vibrant, beautiful just last week. Great job Frontline. Thanks.
@ericwandless7966
@ericwandless7966 2 жыл бұрын
My mother fell and broke several things. My mother developed MRSA in the hospital. As horrible as the next 19 months were for us, her family, I can't imagine how monstrous an experience it was for her. The only silver lining I found was the fact that my mother passed away in 2010. I was able to hold my mother's hand and tell my mother that it was okay to go. Over the past 2 years there have been innumerable families that didn't receive that gift. That fact keeps me grateful daily. Please be well everyone.
@user-te7wc7lh4r
@user-te7wc7lh4r Жыл бұрын
Sorry for your loss.
@J-D248
@J-D248 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely breaks my heart and brought me to tears seeing such a young child go through this. I'm glad she was able to at least make it through it to bring joy to her family and everyone else for a few more years. ❤
@mackenziekarsonovich1073
@mackenziekarsonovich1073 2 жыл бұрын
My dad had a really bad bout with antibiotic resistant bacteria. Luckily he’s fine and fully recovered. It was so scary. I can’t imagine having your child go through that.
@mellyboo513
@mellyboo513 2 жыл бұрын
That poor sweet baby. I cannot imagine. Praying for her family. 💔
@KB-hx3px
@KB-hx3px 2 жыл бұрын
This is so very interesting. I spent 2 months in the ICU due to an antibiotic resistant illness that was never identified. I went in to Toxic Shock. I shouldn’t even be here, but by the grace of some higher being it wasn’t my time and I’m still here 15 years ears later.
@govindagovindaji4662
@govindagovindaji4662 11 ай бұрын
Addi had a beautiful, sweet, loving, kind and patient Mother. I am very sorry for the loss of Addi, such a good spirit to her in this life but you know their hearts are joined forever, together. Peace be upon them.
@VicharB
@VicharB 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this documentary. We do take life for granted while some of others fight to see another day.
@JohnChoidotOrg
@JohnChoidotOrg 2 жыл бұрын
This is more terrifying than any horror movie.
@diannenaworensky6698
@diannenaworensky6698 2 жыл бұрын
The Mother is an incredible Lady. She knew exactly what her Daughter's life chances were. I'm glad that Addie was able to make the decision for herself. May Addie Rest in Peace ✌🏻✌🏻✌🏻✌🏻
@Brenda-in8bd
@Brenda-in8bd Жыл бұрын
Addie is in heaven. Oh yes she is. Dear and sweet young girl.
@MrDopestDope1
@MrDopestDope1 Жыл бұрын
who would want to live like that man
@i-am-frenchie2480
@i-am-frenchie2480 Жыл бұрын
I spent 5 months this year fighting an infection. Thank god for antibiotics
@HeirloomReviews
@HeirloomReviews 3 ай бұрын
I had a UTI for 2 years an it almost killed me!
@i-am-frenchie2480
@i-am-frenchie2480 3 ай бұрын
@@HeirloomReviews why did you wait so long to get it checked? Or what happened? My skin infection kept coming back because the one dr wouldn’t lessen to me so I had to drive to a hospital 8 hrs away to get proper treatment and I was right it was a skin infection not allergies
@HeirloomReviews
@HeirloomReviews 3 ай бұрын
@@i-am-frenchie2480 there saying i have cancer and the wont give me a diagnoses, they just want to cut out half my bladder.
@Tikolico
@Tikolico 2 жыл бұрын
My dad beat cancer just to die from MRSA months later, in the early 2000s, we've known about this bugs since forever, but we keep misusing antibiotics anyways, we keep injecting them into chickens and cows, we keep using a hammer to kill flies and we are starting to pay the price now.
@johntaylor-lo8qx
@johntaylor-lo8qx 2 жыл бұрын
This is the scariest thing I've ever seen in my life !!!! Thank you for this documentary 🙏.
@ginap5656
@ginap5656 2 жыл бұрын
The shock at the end that Addie survived and lived a little while longer - wow.
@MrLakers92
@MrLakers92 Жыл бұрын
This story was absolutely heartbreaking, I am so grateful
@snapkrispies5324
@snapkrispies5324 Жыл бұрын
I know it’s mind blowing I’ve watched it like three times scary
@miltonhollis703
@miltonhollis703 Жыл бұрын
@@snapkrispies5324 This is to scary' don't think I can make it 2nd time around @SNAP I'm trying to pretend this didn't happen....because I'm watching this On CHRISTMAS DAY 🎄......
@snapkrispies5324
@snapkrispies5324 Жыл бұрын
@@miltonhollis703 Yes I know it is completely scary and mine blowing it’ll eat at you end up watching it again God bless enjoy Christmas
@miltonhollis703
@miltonhollis703 Жыл бұрын
@@snapkrispies5324 Never thought anything like this was possible....Merry Christmas @Snap Krispyes...might give it another shot"
@Man_Aslume
@Man_Aslume Жыл бұрын
Hi I am so grateful I'm metal sonic doesn't give a shit
@chefscorner7063
@chefscorner7063 2 жыл бұрын
It's amazing and scary in how fast a Sepsis/MRSA Infection can spread from a simple wound. I had that happen to me. I had a small wound (half the size of a small fingertip) that took several months to heal. About a month after it had finally closed up I was getting ready for bed when I looked down and saw that my foot had a very small, light red blemish that didn't hurt so I thought no big deal. However, when I woke up 7 hours later, my foot had swollen to 3xs its normal size and was now dark purple with a thick, black streak running down the side of my left foots instep!! It took 2 initial surgeries to cut out the infection and an additional 2 surgeries afterward, so in total they cut out about 30-35% of the inside of my left foot. When I was sent home the Dr had put in a "Tack/Tec" (?) line" in my right chest area so I could give myself I.V. Antibiotics for the next 12 weeks, although the Drs thought it would be 6 Weeks! The Dr did save my foot with very minimal scaring when my foot or possibly lower leg could have needed to be amputated! While I'm still healing 9 months later, I feel lucky when I think of what could have happened (Death)... EDIT: For those that may think my surgical wound (now about the size of a Half Dollar coin) wasn't a big deal. It's now been 19 months and it still hasn't closed all the way up!! Even walking more than a few hours a day causes my surgical wound to star bleeding! Just saying... smh. EDIT #2, I'm now on month 24 (2 years) of healing my foot surgery wound area and it's still open! I have changed the way it was being treated and that seems to have sped up the healing. I guess I'll see in a few weeks. Probably TMI, but I have WAY TMT ON MY HANDS! LOL ;)
@AllisterCaine
@AllisterCaine 9 ай бұрын
The most propable cause of death for seamstresses back in the day was a single prick from a needle. People have almost fully forgotten what kind of miracle antibiotics are and to which lengths we should go to protect their effectiveness.
@quedizzle7378
@quedizzle7378 2 жыл бұрын
This is absolutely terrifying. Can you imagine going in with a minor cut and then having to get your arm cut off or worse?
@oneshothunter9877
@oneshothunter9877 2 жыл бұрын
Yes! This was quite normal until the late 1920's...
@quedizzle7378
@quedizzle7378 2 жыл бұрын
@@oneshothunter9877 I know. It was terrible
@cristiantalero96
@cristiantalero96 2 жыл бұрын
It's terrifying to think that for most of human history this has been normal. Diseases, infections, viruses, etc. Humans have gone through a lot of real shit. We are living the best times in human history, and yet, things like these still occur.
@leece_6702
@leece_6702 2 жыл бұрын
Or having your leg hacked off with a machette by an Indian "doctor" with no anesthetic 😳
@abelsoo5465
@abelsoo5465 2 жыл бұрын
@@cristiantalero96 The very fact that we humanity still managed to populate Earth despite so many horrors inflicted upon us, is in itself mind boggling.
@ZMAN_420
@ZMAN_420 2 жыл бұрын
Frontline is one of the greatest shows ever! 👍🏻
@arleneportsmouth1263
@arleneportsmouth1263 Жыл бұрын
This documentary was very well put together and all of the pertinent questions were asked. This was very informative and thought-provoking.
@pyroromancer
@pyroromancer 2 жыл бұрын
Commonly omitted from these stories is that staph thrive in the absence of other bacteria. That's why they are so persistent and prevailent in sterile hospital settings. In natural settings these staph have to compete with other bacteria for resources. Maybe instead of antibiotics we should br fighting staph with bacteria that hinder staph while being harmless to human physiology. Recently researchers found a "giant" class of bacteria thats been among and inside us this whole time that we never identified simply becaise they are harmless to human physiology, but have been observed to seek out specific strains of bacteroa to consume as a resource.
@theCosmicQueen
@theCosmicQueen 2 жыл бұрын
some people use probiotics for this reason. keep the good flora ( bacteria) and it helps keep out the bad ones. good ones from things like natural unsweetened yogurt with active cultures. or use the capsules.
@snowbunny783
@snowbunny783 2 жыл бұрын
Bingo. As a species we’ve been losing bacteria every year. You can’t kill your way to homeostasis
@Si74l0rd
@Si74l0rd 2 жыл бұрын
Not dissimilar to using a bacteriophage. Either way your problem bacteria gets munched without any risk to you or unnecessary chemical intervention. But bacteriophage libraries aren't in line with how capitalism works, so they only exist in the former Soviet countries, of which Georgia is the most renowned for it.
@Si74l0rd
@Si74l0rd 2 жыл бұрын
@@snowbunny783 Yeah, same with allergies. Low level exposure is the best thing in a great many cases, it's when the balance is disturbed that problems arise. Even bacteria have predators though, that's the simplest way to look at the issue, use the bacterias natural predators to wipe it out, they only focus on specific bacteria, so they're no danger to the rest of our cells. In that sense they're better than antibiotics which can exact a heavy till on the organs, as well as your natural fauna.
@kandis.8196
@kandis.8196 2 жыл бұрын
I've had 5 surgeries due to MRSA being in the bone in my arm. I'm still not sure if it's all gone. MRSA is no joke 😞
@oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368
@oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368 2 жыл бұрын
Unclean!
@mlkirkl09
@mlkirkl09 2 жыл бұрын
@@oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368 huh? You can get MRSA from a simple paper cut. You can scrub yourself 1000 times a day and still get MRSA. MRSA is an equal opportunity infection.
@superlibbyanne
@superlibbyanne 2 жыл бұрын
@@oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368 Ass hat.
@MRGAMAJAVRDDJB
@MRGAMAJAVRDDJB 2 жыл бұрын
@Momma Bear amen
@michaelmccray3207
@michaelmccray3207 2 жыл бұрын
MRSA never goes away so ...
@Arsewell-Foundation
@Arsewell-Foundation 2 жыл бұрын
Probably not the best documentary to be watching several years later & currently battling a gram negative UTI for over 15 months 😢
@hildabeaverhausen3944
@hildabeaverhausen3944 2 жыл бұрын
Hang in there. I hope you get well soon.
@DaddyFatSzack
@DaddyFatSzack 2 жыл бұрын
You will recover. Sending you strength
@Meribeeri
@Meribeeri 2 жыл бұрын
Which bacteria is it? I had klebsiella and finally fought it after 1 year by getting vacxinated with strovac
@eileenhetherington3704
@eileenhetherington3704 2 жыл бұрын
I had the same. A drug resistant UTI for 2 years. It is gone now but I had to figure it out and research myself because despite antibiotics it got worse and worse.
@josephinenilsson1541
@josephinenilsson1541 2 жыл бұрын
It’s not a good documentary when it doesn’t even mention that the vast majority of antibiotics use is in the animal agriculture. If you care about this issue, then the absolutely first thing to do is quit meat.
@tracynorris5012
@tracynorris5012 Жыл бұрын
As a former RN, this ECMO knowledge hit my heart cuz I would've signed the papers too cuz most people don't survive 💔 This documentary taught me fear on a whole new level.. God bless you all.
@kokonana4086
@kokonana4086 2 жыл бұрын
If the memory serves me right, I think I have watched this kind of documentary awhile back about the super bug cases that popped up in India and the US (at the NIH). It brought chills down my spines back then and even now. This is truly scary and my heart goes out to every patient/victim effected by this. Antibiotics are like miracle drugs, yet the paradox of 'the more we use, the more we lose' really brings us back to where we started. And, the lack of funding & researching in this field due to the market-driving port folio also aggravates the situation. Just hope and wish that the public and the government would join hands and get more involved with this.
@namenotavailable9989
@namenotavailable9989 2 жыл бұрын
You are correct. I had the same feeling and I read the description this is a documentary that was aired back in 2014.
@sayyadinasri
@sayyadinasri 2 жыл бұрын
We could stop so much of this if people would stop supporting the abuse of antibiotics. We need everyone to stop eating animals right now. Animal agriculture is using at a minimum of 3X more than all medicine combined. The last of our strongest antibiotics have been used in China for pig farms. It’s beyond devastating.
@carolevans5285
@carolevans5285 2 жыл бұрын
I was in a London ICU unit in 2019. My ex put me in coma . I was dead basically. My kids were told I'd passed but half hour later I was on life surport and just about alive. When I came out of the coma I had those tubes in my neck I was told I was on kidney dialysis 4 times my liver was giving up and even tho I was out of a coma I had no idear what was going on. Those nurses saved my life they are amazing in ICU different gravy so to speak. I did come out with illnesses I didn't have b 4 I went into hospital but iv over come them. I count myself lucky to be alive. Thank you all ICU doctors and Nurses. ❤️💕❤️
@rdallas81
@rdallas81 Жыл бұрын
GOD bless you. Glad to hear you are better Carol.
@Wakereu
@Wakereu 2 жыл бұрын
Damn, I have learned of how bad this bacteria can be but never thought it would be this crazy. Good journalism PBS👏👏👏
@samspade436
@samspade436 2 жыл бұрын
*Learned not learnt.
@Livetoeat171
@Livetoeat171 2 жыл бұрын
No such word as learnt. UK uses burnt and spelt, instead of burned and spelled, but learned is used throughout all English language.
@Wakereu
@Wakereu 2 жыл бұрын
@@Livetoeat171 thanks for your correction. I'm open to always learning
@conniekabasharira7084
@conniekabasharira7084 2 жыл бұрын
@@Wakereu they're both correct, English and America English so you can use any
@AVENUENIGHTS
@AVENUENIGHTS Жыл бұрын
Kudos to the video editor on this particular video. Was feeling so anxious while watching this.
@Lion_Hamza
@Lion_Hamza 2 жыл бұрын
As a father it brakes my heart how this poor child suffered. Poor little girl. I hope from the bottom of my heart she rest’s in peace.
@frankstone3809
@frankstone3809 2 жыл бұрын
Free info is such a powerful gift.
@MayimHastings
@MayimHastings 2 жыл бұрын
God bless Addie’s loved ones, it must be impossibly hard to deal with such a loss. What a brilliant light she was, beautiful inside and out. Rest in joy, sweetheart! 💜
@ad6417
@ad6417 Ай бұрын
I was hospitalized for a week with MRSA back in 2010. The Doctor refused to tell me what my diagnosis was even though I knew what it was. I questioned him repeatedly point blank. Do I have MRSA? and he literally said "well we really don't know"... Later that day an infectious disease Doctor came to see me and told me I absolutely had MRSA and that I could die.
@sra525
@sra525 2 жыл бұрын
I was overwhelmed when I saw Addie, her bright, shinning face. But deep within I realized by looking at her mom that all wasn't good. I recall what the Doctor had said 'both mother and daughter had a strong will, a strong heart and Addie wasn't showing any signs of retreat.
@Stimm002
@Stimm002 2 жыл бұрын
We took our son to doctor a few years back. He had a wicked cough, croope and a temperature. He had a chest infection. They asked if we wanted antibiotics... asked... when we said only if he really needs them. The relief on thier face was obvious and evident. They are so used to parents kicking up a huge fuss if antibiotics arnt given they ask even when they're not completely necessary. He was just under a year old at the time. He got better fine without antibiotics.
@nProneColor
@nProneColor 2 жыл бұрын
That definitely made the problem way worse, can’t believe doctors would ask parents like they would know if it good or not and just give them out. Thankfully you guys were smart and realized he may not of needed them to recover.
@Stimm002
@Stimm002 2 жыл бұрын
@@nProneColor I think it was less to do with wether the parents would know or not and more to do with the abuse if they are not offered. I had a friend and if her kids even made a noise that sounded like a sneeze she rushed them to the doctor, she repeatedly told us stories of her kicking off because they wouldn't give her antibiotics for her kid... who had virus anyway, if it was sick at all so antibiotics are useless against a virus. I think they wouldn't of asked us but for the fact it was borderline. My little one was at the point where you could justify the use of antibiotics but not where they were definitely needed.
@MewMewYu1
@MewMewYu1 2 жыл бұрын
I've known about this since like 2008. Since I found out, for my entire childhood I've been wondering why everyone gets antibiotics for almost everything they have. Nonetheless, great and informative video, things are already bad but I still hope for something to change. Better late than never...
@sayyadinasri
@sayyadinasri 2 жыл бұрын
Get into pharmacology and you’ll be mortified. We need everyone to stop eating animals right now. Animal agriculture is using at a minimum of 3X more than all medicine combined. The last of our strongest antibiotics have been used in China for pig farms. It’s beyond devastating.😭
@Wabbelpaddel
@Wabbelpaddel 2 жыл бұрын
@@sayyadinasri why the hell are they even doing that?
@redred222
@redred222 2 жыл бұрын
and there where idiots that wanted antibiotics for covid instead of you know getting the vaccine and then telling these people that its caused by a virus people have no idea that viruses and bacteria they just dont understand
@kristinam2719
@kristinam2719 Жыл бұрын
What a scary world we live, we just don’t know how scary until this affects someone we love.
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