Argumentative Essay On Antibiotics

1859 Words4 Pages

One day, you wake up with a sore throat and a sniffly nose. You go to the doctor’s office and the nurse swabs your throat. That day, you get a call saying you have strep throat, and the doctor prescribes you a dose of antibiotics. A week later, your sore throat is completely gone and you are back to normal. Many people have taken antibiotics, but don’t necessarily know what they are, how frequently they consume them, or how risky their use is in general. According the Merriam-Webster, an antibiotic is defined as “a substance produced by or semisynthetic substance derived from a microorganism and able in dilute solution to inhibit or kill another microorganism.” Today, we use antibiotics in almost everything. We treat our pets with them, inject them into our livestock, and have even developed ways to put antibiotics in the food we grow and eat. Our society is now hugely dependent of the effectiveness of antibiotics in every day life. Without them, a simple surgery becomes a life-threatening risk, the smallest cut becomes a potentially fatal wound, and every deadly disease can spread like wildfire. However, the various benefits of using antibiotics in livestock, crops, and to treat human illnesses do not outweigh the risks associated with the massive overuse of them occurring today, with the most important risk being antibiotic resistance. Antibiotics were only recently developed, but have changed the world since their discovery. In 1928, a man named Alexander Fleming stumbled upon by accident a mold spore that seemed to kill the bacterial strains he was growing in petri dishes. He decided to investigate more into this, and eventually developed the first antibiotic, Penicillin. To his astonishment, this Penicillin could kill vario... ... middle of paper ... ...cs to patients. Prioritize the recipient base so that antibiotics are used as a last resort. This could be made possible by public use of good illness prevention skills such as washing hands and keeping woulds clean (Davies). These steps and others could greatly reduce or even possibly solve the entire problem of antibiotic resistance and allow us to continue to use antibiotics in a responsible manner. Because regardless of resistance, antibiotics does save lives every day. The overuse of antibiotics in livestock, the risky use of GMOs, and the human clinical overprescription of antibiotics are risks that truly do outweigh any benefits of continuing use at it’s current pace. These are problems which can be easily remedied and we should do everything in our power to do so. The evidence is there, resistance is on the rise. We must stop it before it truly is too late.

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