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fgfarben | 5 months ago
People who suffer from unexplained / untreatable diseases like arthritis or MS might get some relief, while there would be an added pressure on the pharma industry to innovate in antibiotic development by accelerating the loss of existing antibiotic efficacy through the evolution of resistance.
ipaddr|5 months ago
You want to cause current antibiotics to be less useful so pharma will invest more? Just allow generic versions.
If you want to pressure the pharma industry use laws.
kragen|5 months ago
Some antibiotics do have a good enough safety profile that such occasional speculative use would be a good tradeoff. Elderly people are also the one group least able to handle infections! Others do not.
pjc50|5 months ago
This is another one of those schemes for getting a bunch of people killed in the service of medical crankery, isn't it.
kragen|5 months ago
akoboldfrying|5 months ago
You're joking, right?
Total antibiotic resistance is what we're trying to minimise, remember. You're proposing to achieve that in the long term by making it worse in the short term, but the only way that makes sense is if there is actually an abundance of new antibiotics "out there" waiting to be discovered, and the binding constraint currently limiting their development is that pharmaceutical companies can't be bothered researching them. But that is obviously not true -- steadily growing resistance has raised alarm for decades, and any pharma company that could produce a genuinely new antibiotic today would make immediate bank.
IOW, the incentives are already there and they aren't helping, so why take the extra step of making things deliberately worse?