Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
You are about to listen to the Doctor Dahlia show,
sase stimulating medical talk radio. Any medical advice doctor Dahalia
Wax gives on her show should not be substituted for
an actual visit to your medical provider. And now here's
doctor Dahlia.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
All right, we're back. I'm not the Dollia Ship. Thank
you all for tuning in. One eight seven seven Doctor
DOLLI one eight seven seven d oc d A l I. So,
one thing that I fear is carbon monoxide poisoning. I
do not like carbon monoxide. Carbon monoxide sends over one
hundred thousand people to the er every year, kills about
five hundred people annually. And carbon monoxide you can't tell
(01:01):
if you're breathing it in no taste, colorless, no smell
to it. And what carbon monoxide does is because carbon
monoxide is carbon monoxide mono, meaning one oxygen CO looks
pretty similar to oxygen. Oxygen or dioxide is two oxygen
(01:25):
atoms together because oxygen can't be by itself, So carbon
monoxide looks like oxygen, and so your body sometimes can't
tell the difference. The two atoms look similar, and so
blood has hemoglobin chemogloba carries oxygen to the tissues. Carbon
monoxide competes with that site that oxygen usually latches onto,
(01:50):
and if carbon monoxide gets their first, now your hemoglobin
within your blood cells starts taking carbon monoxide to your tissues.
Geboglobin doesn't know that difference. Your tissues and your organs
like the heart and brain go what the hell is this?
But they have no control, so they get starved if
(02:10):
much needed oxygen, become hypoxic and then start to have injury.
Symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning our headache, sore throat, cough, nausea, vomiting,
abdominal pain, difficulty breathing, wheezing, dizziness, chest pain, fainting, confusion, fatigue,
the weakness, blurred vision, rapid heart rate, and then sometimes
(02:31):
we might identify you commit into the er with a
cherry red color to your skin and lips. So to
treat carbon monoxide poisoning has been tricky. What we need
to do is displace the carbon monoxide and allow oxygen
to get in. So we now have to up the competition.
(02:56):
And how do we do that? Well, we do that
by pushing in oxygen. One hundred percent pure oxygen hyperbaric oxygen.
According to Medscape, if you breathe room ayor it could
take three hundred minutes to get enough oxygen in to
displace the carbon monoxide poisoning. That's assuming you lived through that.
(03:20):
If you're at one hundred percent non rebreather mask of oxygen,
you could reduce that time down to ninety minutes. With
hyperbaric oxygen. They've been able to shorten the time to
thirty two minutes, but still thirty two minutes. So Good
News Network says that we might have a better antidote.
(03:44):
They say fifteen hundred deaths are caused in the US
by carbon monoxide poisoning, and they say half of survivors
who do get the oxygen therapy to try to treat
can still have long term heart and break damage. So
a study publishing the un University of Maryland School of
Medicine in PNAS, the research team developed a new engineer
(04:06):
protein based therapy called r comm HBDCCC. Now, how that
works is, while you're trying to get oxygen to displace
the carbon monoxide on the chemoglobin, it acts like a
sponge to soak up the carbon monoxide from the blood,
kind of like a keylating agent, so r COMM is
(04:29):
short for regulator of metabolism. It's a natural protein that
they got from the bacteria parabuke hold area xenovorins, and
they say they use it to sense minute levels of
carbon monoxide in its environment, or the bacteria uses this
protein to sense these levels of carbon monoxide. So researchers
(04:51):
engineered aversion that is highly selective grabbing carbon monoxide without
interferre with the oxygen or other important molecules in the bloodstream,
your nitric oxide and other things that you need for
your blood pressure or in vessels, So being able to
capture this carbon monoxide and then allow oxygen. In fact,
(05:14):
the carbon monoxide they're saying has a two hundred to
four hundred times greater affinity than oxygen with hemoglobin. So
hemoglobin almost prefers it because it knows how to wiggle
its tushy in you know, to the little seat. So
carbon monoxide can kill you. And where does it come from? Well,
(05:36):
anything that burns or combusts. It's created during the incomplete
combustion of fuels like wood, natural gas, coal, propane, and
if air quality is poor, if temperature is low, carbon
monoxide could get formed. Now, during a complete combustion, you
get water and carbon dioxide, but an incomplete combustion ends
(05:58):
up forming carbon monoxide. You'll get this from tobacco, smoke, fires, fireplaces, generators,
water heaters, grills, clothes dryers, vehicles, landscape tools, wood stoves,
gas stoves, furnaces, boilers, and power tools. Now we're coming
into the colder season. I love this time of year,
but unfortunately this is where we start to see more
(06:19):
carbon monoxide poisonings and deaths. Because let's say you lose
power and you go, I got a generator, or we're
gonna try to heat the home. If you don't have
proper ventilation because you're afraid to open a window because
of the cold, you could then collect carbon monoxide poisoning.
You have to have your living space monitored, so get
a carbon monoxide monitor. There are portable ones, so when
(06:43):
you travel, if you think you're gonna be in a
cabin or in an airbnb or something that could be leaked,
have a portable carbon monoxide monitor. They're not that expensive.
Then avoid fires and any sort of of products in
closed spaces. If you have one, make sure there's an
opening to the outside so the carbon monoxide doesn't fill
(07:05):
up you know the house. Don't sit in your car
in the garage to listen to a song. Shut the
car off. Avoid running your car within closed spaces. Always
check your exhaust system regularly to insure c IS carbon
monoxide is not leaking into the vehicle. But you know,
I think weird. Al Yankovic's parents both died while they
(07:28):
were watching TV because their generator was emitting this. So
it's it's tragic how this stuff happens. But I love
that we might have a new pure one eight seven seven,
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Speaker 2 (10:17):
You're a band on the Doctor Dollar Show. Think you
all for June it in one eight seven seven Doctor
Dolly one eight seven seven d O C D A
l I. Big thanks to Talk Media Network for making
the show happen. Big thanks to Daniel, our producer, and
big thanks to y'all for tuning in. We really do
appreciate it. Don't forget to follow us on Twitter or
exit Doctor Dolli, Facebook, The Doctor Doli Show, and on YouTube,
Click like and subscribe. So would you want AI teaching
(10:41):
your students? Teaching your kids? If school districts are struggling
to pay teachers adequately, they're struggling to recruit teachers, they're
you know, always battling, you know, having enough substitutes. There's
a lot of controversy over the curriculum and what kids
are actually learning. Do you think, as a parent, you
(11:03):
would want AI to instead be used to teach your
kid and keep people completely out of it. Now, I
told you how I think education should be. I think
it should be real life people. But the core classes
are no more than twenty minutes thirty minutes at max.
(11:24):
They're all done in the morning, the math, reading, the science,
the history, English, and then the afternoon is all about
the practical life skills practical learning. The kids, depending on
their age group, learn about the trades, learn about all
the different careers that are out there. Learn how to hunt,
learn how to fish, learn how to farm, learn how
(11:46):
to garden, learn self defense, learn first aid, you know,
practical stuff, so that by the time they are sixteen
years old and they finished their soft per year, they
have a pretty good idea of what they think they
might be interested in. High school stopped at age sixteen
and then age seventeen and eighteen, which is still part
(12:07):
of the K through twelve, so we don't have to
pay extra for college. That will be where the students
junior senior year pick the trade certificate or go for
their associates degree in the field that they found they liked.
So every kid by the time they leave school at
the age of eighteen has an associate's degree or has
(12:30):
a trade certification, so they are ready to work. They like,
you know, have an interest. They are pretty well rounded.
Not to mention they could hopefully survive out in the
wild because they know how to fish and hunt and
they and I think that would be a great way
to educate our kids and not costing a lot of money,
(12:54):
especially when a lot of these people that are teaching,
you know, the trades and the different and they're they're
different specialties and they're you know, end up getting a
lot of uh inherent advertising and marketing and and it's
it would have caused a taxpayer one more done. But
(13:15):
I don't think all the schools are going to do that.
I wish I would. I gotta take kids would be
pretty damn smart, pretty well well rounded. However, there's a
school in San Francisco that is attorney to AI and
the Rockefeller School. Actually the San Francisco school is called Alpha,
(13:38):
and it is a new school in San Francisco that
uses AI. No bells, no grades, no teachers. This would
being reported by KSL dot com. AI handles the lessons.
Adults that are in the room are called guides and coaches,
and they are there to help with mo motivational and
(14:01):
emotional support. Students spend just two hours on court subjects, which,
by the way, that's what I support. No none of
this eight hour day. But I don't know if i'm
I think AI is the right way to go. But
(14:23):
the students spend two hours a day on course subjects,
all top by AI powered apps, which according to the school,
do not have chat functionality. They use a vision model
to watch a screen to coach. The rest of the
days use for hands on life skills and passion projects.
The school said that AI is helping one student design
an app for molecular gastronomy. Then he learned how to
(14:46):
pitch his story to investors. And that was at the
age of fourteen. All right, so it looks like they're
taking some of my plan, which I have to own
the plan just I just want kids getting taught. But
is AI the answer? So my plan for education? And
is AI the answer to dealing with the budget deficits
(15:07):
and dealing with the subjectivity dealing with you know. I
mean I live in an area where you know, we
hear once a year somebody was assaulting a kid in
the classroom. I mean, you know, or having an inappropriate relationship. Now,
I I tell you about Ready Player one in that book.
I think they made a movie as well. We're in
(15:29):
the future. School is all AI, all online. It's all virtual,
and if you don't sign into class, you get in trouble.
You have to continue to do your classes. They know
if you don't sign it and you have to uh,
you and your avatar have to sign in. You have
to do the lesson. You still have to pass. But
(15:50):
it's all you know, computer, And I really do predict
that that's going to be the way we're going to
be teaching kids later. I think the the we were,
we're just seeing AI and ways to limit staff, limit liability,
save money. I mean, imagine if you have one classroom
(16:11):
like a Ready Player one that has one adult that
is now being sent out over the over the internet
to all these schools, same class, same you know, if
you want all fifth graders to learn you know the
times tables. Well, actually it's funny. I learned timestables in
the third grade now they teach or fifth grade. They
(16:32):
teach it in the third grade, thank god. But let's
say you want all your fifth graders to learn about
the Constitution. Do you really need separate classes for that
or can you do it all in one class. My
issue is is the lockdown showed us that that's not
a good way for kids to learn. Kids cannot learn
by a computer. They need to be around people. That's
(16:53):
why I really want the afternoons of class to be
about life skills and learning about the trades and and
get hands on. I think that's crucial for kids to learn.
I think I learned by something, not by if you
if you had me read something, I'm not gonna be
able to pick it up and just learn it. I
have to watch it. That's why YouTube is, you know,
(17:15):
so popular, because people can actually watch how to do something.
And I've learned how to do a lot of do
it yourself type stuff in my house because of YouTube.
If my husband's out of town, oh I got this.
I didn't even need to. You know, you have that
company rent a husband. I didn't even have to rent
a husband. I told my son, do you need me
(17:37):
to rent a husband? He said, no, Mom, I'm like,
but he could be cute. No, so my son wouldn't
let me rent a husband. But I learned how to
do things myself. But a kid needs guidance. So what
do you think one eight seven seven doct dolly one
eight seven seven d O C D A L. I.
(18:00):
You know we're I don't think we're gonna have a
lot of control over this. I think this is where
we're going in the future. And the one of the
biggest issues we've had that we've done to ourselves is staffing.
And you know, when I talk to people who run businesses,
you know they say their biggest cost to staff and
(18:21):
their biggest headache is staff. And you know, my my office,
you know, my biggest headache was insurance companies. The insurance
companies were the biggest headache. But I got to tell you,
staff not easy. Some staff stealing, the drama between staff,
staff calling out, not showing up, saying they were working
on the referralog when they didn't. I mean, these are
(18:43):
things that could kill a patient. And so you know,
people ask me, will I ever go back into medicine
or or I mean I'm in medicine. I I do
tell the medicine. But will I ever reopen my office?
And the answer to that is a hell no, not
until I could figure out how to do that, you know,
(19:03):
and and figure out how to you know, protect my
patients if staff calls out or doesn't do their job
or and and the staff. You're only as good as
your staff and healthcare especially you know, our amazing nurses.
The health our healthcare system is the backbone is based
on our nurses and and and other staff. And if
(19:26):
I can't ensure that I have that staff as a constant, yeah,
it's I just can't do it. And that's what I
think a lot of people are starting to think to themselves,
what could I automate so I can still function? You know,
(19:49):
my husband would get so frustrated that some of these
companies or restaurants were closed, and he's like, boy, they
just want to take time off, And I go, I
bet they didn't have staff. If you don't have staff,
you have you have to close down.
Speaker 5 (20:01):
Now.
Speaker 2 (20:01):
Me as a doctor, I could answer the phone, I
could file I could do a lot of things myself,
so whenever we didn't have enough staff, I still handle things.
But what happens when you have millions of kids. So
what I predict is schools are going to have an
AI model that if they don't have a substitute. Remember
(20:21):
we would watch a movie, the substitute teacher would come
in and have us watch a movie. Well, rather than that,
they're going to have AI lessons and then as teachers
call out or there's not enough subs, they're going to
utilize the AI system, and then eventually they'll probably hire
(20:42):
fewer teachers, implement it more, and AI is going to
be teaching our kids one eight seven seven Doctor Dollary
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Speaker 2 (22:18):
All right, well you're back on the Doctor Dalia Show.
Thank you all for tuning in. One eight seven seven
Doctor Dali one eight seven seven d O C D
A L. I So when I said that we need
to free Palestine from Hamas, and I know people thought
I was joking, and I was like, I'm not joking.
I mean Hamas is in control. Hamas has always been
(22:39):
in control, and sadly what they're doing is barbaric, and
Palestinians are not being ruled by Israel, They're being ruled
by uh Hamas and they can't be free, they can't escape.
When Israel sent leaflets say look we're going to be
coming in to get the hostages. There is going to
be bombing lee we were told that many of them
(23:01):
were not allowed to leave. Hamas would point guns to them.
When aid was coming in, Israel had sent three thousand
calories per person per day, including children, for food that
Hamas would not let that food come in. Now, of
course some of the outlets like, oh no, that's not true.
It was genocide, it was all the barbarism was Israel. Well,
(23:25):
now we're seeing public Hamas isn't even trying to hide
their barbarism, like they didn't hide it on October seventh,
twenty twenty three, and we're being told that Hamas security
forces have returned to Gaza streets, clashing with armed groups
and killing alleged quote unquote collaborators gangsters because they want
(23:46):
to restore law and order where Israeli troops withdrew and
they are publicly executing them. Now, this lawlessness is something
that can make the whole area. This is why it was.
(24:08):
You know, people said, well, Israel just needs to get out,
Israel needs to get out. In fact, many Palestinians were
protected because in those zones where Israel was, Kamas couldn't
hurt them. Now Israel's gone, and people were saying, why
doesn't Israel just you know, leave not with the hostages.
(24:29):
They had to get the hostages back. But you know,
why don't they just show the world what Hamas does well,
because again the media isn't gonna cover it. If the
media doesn't cover it, and they all want to be
about well, this is Israel's fault, this is Israel's fault.
They're going to cover whatever they want. And again we
want to protect all individuals, Palestinians, Gosins, Jews, Israeli's everybody, Christians,
(24:57):
but unfortunately Hamas does not want to disarm, is not
fully accepting the terms of the peace deal. Thank god
they let the twenty hostages go. They took two hundred
and fifty but murdered the majority of them. So the
(25:18):
twenty left, thank god, twenty souls are left have come home. Well,
now comes the hard part. And if you thought that
was hard, which was is how to then make sure
that Gaza, you know, is going to be safe for
(25:38):
gazas See, the reason why Israel pulled out was because
there was so much pressure, and they pulled out back
in two thousand and five. They have not been running
Gaza since, I know, you know, these idiots on college
campuses are called in apartheid and colonization and all the
other stuff that they're accusing Israel doing. But Israel pulled
(25:58):
out and saying, look, you guys want to govern yourselves.
If this is what you want, it's all yours. And
you saw what they did. The problem is is not
only were they hurting Palestinians, but then they threatened Israelis.
And so this peace deal has to ensure that they
could never attack Israel again. And Hamas is free to go.
(26:23):
They are free. They are not going to be it's
not going to be like you know the Herber trials,
and you know they are free to leave, go to
any country you want. It's just no country wants them.
And for people thinking, oh, you know, Hammas, they're not
all bad. You know, they delivered a body to Israel
(26:46):
of one of the hostages that wasn't even Israeli. They're
just giving them dead bodies. I mean, we Israel needs
their loved ones back, you know, they they need to
be able to move on and heal. God forbid you
lose one of your loved ones to you know this
this this you know, barbaric attack. And then and then
(27:11):
they they take you know, the the your your loved
one hostage. You want your baby, your husband, your wife back.
You know, people have been asking me, you know where,
where where are all those old people that they were
taking pictures with dead. They didn't keep them. They either
(27:34):
killed them or let them die. You notice many of
the hostages that have returned or men. Many of the
women didn't make it. Some women were released, but many
of the women were just destroyed. My friend's niece was
(27:55):
raped and then lit on that day of the attack,
lit on fire, put into tires and bird of life
after being raaped. So their treatment of women, and also
some of the women probably died of starvation and died
from the conditions. When they found some of the hostages
(28:17):
and the bodies of some of the hostages early on
they were like, I don't know how these people live
through this. And so some of the healthiest of men
were able to live the ordeal of what seven hundred
fifty days. Now more bodies are supposed to be expected
(28:38):
to be returned. You know, the Hmas when they killed
years ago and they did what they did, they don't
want us scene the evidence of that. So I think
they're also not only do they not know where all
the dead bodies are because they just you know, fed
them to the wolves and said, you guys, do whatever
(28:58):
you want. But I think also they don't want there
to be proof of some of the ways that they
tortured them. You know, when Israeli officials came in after
the massacre and they saw these kids with their pelvis
is shattered from being raped, babies, kids, I mean, just
you know, they don't want that that media coverage, well
(29:22):
that they should have never done it. And what's really
the worst part about all of this is that we
have humans on our earth that thought this was okay,
that this is how they act, you know, and you
would think, okay, well, with the ceasefire, you know, Hamas
is going to be like my bad, you know, and kumbaya.
(29:45):
No terrorists are terrorists. And so I don't understand why
the public things that all of a sudden, Hamas should
get a you know, their own free country. Now, this
two state solution, everybody keeps, you know, talking about who's
(30:07):
running that state. Egypt already has their country, Jordan has theirs.
Speaker 1 (30:14):
Is this is this for?
Speaker 8 (30:16):
You know?
Speaker 2 (30:17):
And and if it is for Palestinians, who's going to
take is Hamas going to do the same thing. You
cannot have a country run by a terrorist. Look what's
happening in Afghanistan. So we we have our work cut
out for us. Thank god Trump is at the helm.
It is going to take other countries to work together.
(30:42):
You know, Hamas had a lot of its power and
money because of Iran, and thank god you have United
Air Emirates, you have Egypt, you have now Saudi Arabia
and other countries saying, look, we we do better when
there's peace. We want to make this work. But what
happens when Trump's out of office? That's what everybody's asking.
(31:04):
If Trump leaves and we get another Biden, are we screwed?
Is whatever you know area or or or whatever shall
we say? You know, Gaza or territory you know is
in right now? You know, stilts in control of Hamas.
(31:26):
But whatever area we take away from Hamases, Hamas come
in the next day and take over. We got to
work cut out for us. One eight seven seven dout salad.
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Speaker 2 (34:17):
All right, we are back on Doctor Dalia Show. Thank
you over to me then one eight seven seven Doctor
Dali one eight seven seven Doc d A l I.
So it's been nearly one hundred years since Sir Alexander Fleming,
Scottish biologist, was messing around in a lab at Saint
(34:42):
Mary's Hospital of London back in nineteen twenty eight, and
he had a petri dish of staphlococcus bacteria, and I
guess some mold got out it and mold started growing
on his Petri dish. But on your peaku dish, when
(35:03):
you have something that is bacteria cytyl killing the bacteria,
you get a little border almost disk area that almost
pushes back the bacteria and clears the area. So if
you ever see a contaminated boy, if I contaminated petri dishes,
I was the contaminated clean. I really need to do
(35:27):
a better job not contaminating by petri dishes. And I
had to throw them all out and love micro but
that was always hard. But when you see that, you
know when mold starts to have an effect on the bacteria.
Fleming was like, wait a second, this mold is producing
a substance that is inhibiting the growth of the bacteria. Now,
(35:53):
the mold was later identified as penicillum no tattum. The
substance that he thought that he named that inhibited the
growth of bacteria became penicillin. This laid the groundwork for
us to later use penicillin as an antibiotic. The mass
(36:15):
production happened in the nineteen forties. I believe researchers such
as Howard Florey and Ernest Chain of Oxford. American drug
companies also got involved, and I believe they used a
new strain of this mold found on canalope. So an
accidental discovery made such a life saving change for us,
(36:39):
which is why I'm a huge fan of you know,
anecdotal advice and you know experimentation. You know, not gain
a function research, but because sometimes the next best discovery
is you know something that you weren't looking for. You know,
we always tell you you'll find love with you stopped
(37:00):
looking for it. You know, when I said I'm done
with dating, I'm done with guys. I'm not dating anymore
than all of a sudden, Corey was available and it was,
oh man, where were you? My whole life? So I
mean I knew him earlier, and you know, he was
dating others and I didn't think he finished so in
his oats, But now he was ready to date me.
(37:22):
So once you stop looking, sometimes that's where you find something.
And so our research eventually gets refined. By the forties,
we ended up being able to produce penicillin. This helped
our soldiers in World War Two. Drug companies work with
(37:45):
the US Department of agriculture, and they were able to
make a higher yielding strain of penicillin Penicillium mold now P. Chrysogenium,
which they found on a moldy cantalopen Illinois. This new
strain then helped mass production and widespread use. So the
(38:07):
history of penicillin then you know it is fascinating, and
then I guess we start to synthesize it in the
fifties and here we are today with multiple different antibiotics.
And penicillin was the start of us being able to
fight infection, increased our longevity and save lives, and it
(38:27):
was amazing. The problem we have now is that these
drugs are decades old, and the bugs that used to
be sensitive to and weak and vulnerable to have gotten smarter.
And when you have a bacteria or a fungus or
(38:49):
a virus that can outsmart our treatment, we call them
super or superbugs. The World Health Organization is saying that
one in every se expacterial infections are resistant to antibiotics.
So the World Health Organizations called for antibotic medications to
be used more responsibly. Based on data corning to Fox
(39:10):
News from more than one hundred countries between twenty sixteen
to twenty twenty three, the Health Agency determined that resistance
to antibiotics rose forty percent in infection samples. So our
asino A, cenotobacter are ecoli, our club Ziella, are Niceria gonorrhea,
are non typhoid, salmonella, Shagella, staff strip. We're struggling in
(39:35):
terms of our antibiotic punch and efficacy. And when you
have gram negative drug resists of bacteria like E. Coli
or clubszel in pneumonia, that could lead to sepsis, organ
failure and death. Same thing with mursa, methisil and resistance staff.
So our antibicrobials, whether the antivirals, anti fungals, antiparasites, we
(39:57):
we we have our work cut out for us. Now
how do we do that in the age of telemedicine.
So in the age of telemedicine, see before somebody would
come in and say and I have STRAP. I could
smell your strap before I even walked into the room,
and then if it looked like STREP. I didn't have
to test you. But for these individuals saying I know
(40:18):
I have STRAP, we in the clinic or in the
urgent care will swap you. If you're negative for STRAP,
you don't get the antibiotic, unless, of course, we can
get bacterial pneumonia or an ear infection or something else.
With tell A Medicine it's different, but tell of Medicine,
people are saying I have STREP, and you have some
doctors not following antabotics. Stewardship going well, here's your antibotic.
And we've had some people where they had flu or
(40:40):
covid that whole time and they never got treated correctly.
And so with tell A Medicine, even though the companies
are trying to ensure that we're not over prescribing antibiotics,
there's still a lot of doctors saying, I believe you,
here's the antibotic. Also, you have patients who are threatening
to review them poorly, and since doctors get fired for
(41:00):
poor reviews, they're like, look, I'm not gonna get fired
if I give an antibiotic, so let me protect myself
from bad reviews. Same thing I'm seeing doctors are saying
that their Yelp reviews are hideous because they're trying not
to overprescribe antibiotics. So they're like, forget it, I can't
let it room business. Okay, we have a job to do.
(41:20):
But also as a patient, I get that if I
think I need an antibiotic and I'm gonna feel better,
I'm not gonna say, you know what, I'm worried about
antibiotic resistance. I think I'll pass on my antibiotic. You know,
that's okay. Let's you know, you know, try to you know,
(41:40):
take one for the team when you're feeling bad and
you got to get to work and you got to
deal with the kids, and you know, you got responsibility,
and you're like, look, I feel better on the antibotic.
I get that, all right, Yeah, I tell you that's
z pak. Wow, that z pak was a wonder drug.
The problem is, and z PACs aren't working that well anymore.
(42:01):
And what happens when your antibiotic doesn't work. It's scary.
And people who overtake antibiotics seem to have higher tolerance
and are helping promote resistance. So we need to come
up with better ways to treat these these pathogens. Now,
if you have COVID, we do have an anti viral,
(42:22):
we have Packsloavid. Don't be treating COVID with a zpac.
I know That's what we did early on because we
didn't know what else to do, and we thought people
had bacterial type pneumonia. But yep, we if you have flu. Again,
if you have flu, you are not supposed to be
(42:46):
using back to anti biotics for that. Also, we have
tama flu. We have things that you could use for that.
So we have to be better at what we're doing
in terms of our approach to pathogens, and we also
have to look at silver nitrate. We have to look
(43:06):
at other things that can cure like acne. Many people
are like, well, I need antibotics for my acne. Do
you really You know there's we you know there's bacteria,
but there's other ways to treat acne that you don't
always have to use quantic antabotics for. But I gotta
tell you it's not gonna be easy. One eight seven seven,
(43:28):
Doctor Dollar, you don't go wait. Hey, guys, it's doctor Dahlia.
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