Fear of a super STD? Improperly treated martial lung leads to terrible consequences

Electron microscopy of the Wuhan pneumonia virus, with the virus in yellow and normal cells in blue and pink.

Wuhan pneumonia continues to be a global pandemic that has killed 1.8 million people since the outbreak began last year. A more contagious variant of the virus was previously discovered in the UK, and now World health Organization (WHO) experts have warned that the excessive use of antibiotics during the epidemic has made some sexually transmitted diseases, including super gonorrhea, significantly more resistant to drugs, and that incurable “super STDs” may emerge in the future. The future is likely to see the emergence of incurable “super STDs”.

The WHO has warned that more and more cases of Wuhan pneumonia are being diagnosed with excessive use of antibiotics, and that these STDs are becoming highly resistant to drugs.

According to the British media “The Sun” reported that a U.S. study showed that 71% of patients diagnosed with Wuhan pneumonia received antibiotics, but only 4% of people really need to use so many antibiotics; in the United Kingdom, there is a similar study pointed out that 75% of suspected cases or confirmed cases of Wuhan pneumonia patients in the country, they received antibiotics, but less than 1% of patients really need to use antibiotics.

Dr Hanan Balkhy, a WHO resistance expert, warned that we should not ignore the high risk of misuse of antibiotics in the treatment of pneumonia in Wuhan. She said that in most cases of Wuhan pneumonia, the use of these antibiotics does not produce a therapeutic effect or improve their symptoms, but makes the bacteria present in the patient’s body more resistant to treatment.

Barkey called for the misuse of antibiotics in Wuhan pneumonia patients unless there is a clear medical need for them, despite the serious epidemic that humanity is now facing.

Consequences of Antibiotic Abuse Fears 10 Million Deaths by 2050

The World Health Organization (WHO) Secretary-General Tan Desai (Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus) has warned that some patients are infected with viruses or germs that are increasingly resistant to drugs and eventually become “superbugs”, which could seriously hamper the development of modern medicine.

WHO has published a report that there is a serious lack of new drugs to deal with different diseases. Due to the misuse of antibiotics, viruses and germs are becoming more and more resistant to drugs, resulting in a greater threat to humans. Previously, health experts also warned that the above situation, the threat to humans, even more serious than cancer.

Some experts say that if antibiotics fail, important medical procedures, such as intestinal surgery, caesarean surgery, joint surgery and chemotherapy, will become dangerous or even difficult to perform.

Globally, it is estimated that an average of 700,000 people die each year due to drug resistance from diseases such as tuberculosis, HIV, which causes AIDS, and malaria. If countries do not take any active action, it is estimated that by 2050, as many as 10 million people will die each year from these conditions.