I looked up antibiotics in Harrison’s Textbook of Internal Medicine.
The listing referred me to “antimicrobials. ” This caused me to
realize how much more accurately the second term describes these
substances, given the broad-spectrum nature of a lot of them.
I must confess that, as a doctor, I do prescribe “antimicrobials. ”
Perhaps I prescribe more antifungals and nonprescription remedies
than the usual doctor, but I do prescribe antibiotics, as well.
Perhaps even more horrifying, considering Doug’s articles condemning
them, is that I’ve taken them myself! In fact, in these times
it’s a rare individual who goes through life without ingesting
those little pills. So, three questions have become important
- when should you take antibiotics, when should you refrain, and
Alexander Fleming, by the grace of God, brought us a mixed blessing
in 1928 with his accidental discovery of penicillin produced by,
of all things, a fungus. Medicine’s interest treating people for
exposure to fungi dropped dramatically in succeeding years, until
the microbes were only thought important insofar as their ability
Interest in fighting bacteria proliferated like a flesh-eating
Strep infection, fueling the race to discover ever more antibiotics.
Pharmaceutical salespeople invaded doctors’ offices and hospitals,
intent on convincing physicians their antibiotic was better than
the others. These salespeople supported their pitches with studies,
graphs, charts and convincing stats, while often failing to mention
that their research had been funded by their own companies. The
I have no quarrel with such salespeople. They’re regular men and
women like you and me, just trying to make a living. However,
when human lives are involved, funding research to prove that
your own product is better than the competition’s is just plain
wrong. The advantage is obvious, and the danger that a great deal
I believe that an impartial, third party should be assigned to
perform such research, funded by a mandatory “ante ” from all pharmaceutical
companies involved in producing a given category of drug. Of course,
that will be the day! In case the above scenario never happens,
we would do well to take with several grains of salt the unregulated
Perhaps you are wondering about the use - and abuse - of antibiotics
in general. Let me give you an example. One of the most common
diagnoses given at a doctor’s office is the upper respiratory
infection (URI). It accounts for up to 70 percent of all antibiotics
dispensed (Annals of Internal Medicine. American College of Physicians.
However, according to Dr. Carol Kauffman, most URIs are not caused
by the bacteria that antibiotics are designed to fight. Rather,
Kauffman says, they are caused by fungi. So, unless a secondary,
bacterial infection presents itself - and even then, the rules
Regarding ear infections, in one study, children administered
antibiotics for acute otitis media suffered double the rate of
adverse effects compared to children in the study who took placebos
(Clinical Evidence. 2000). The difference in outcome for those
children in the study who took antibiotics compared to those who
do not was almost negligible. Some scientists counter that children
who take antibiotics run lower risks of secondary ear infections
such as meningitis or mastoiditis (infection of the angular bone
Of course, the landscape is complicated by noncompliance. The
portion of people who take their antibiotics as prescribed has
been estimated at anywhere between 8 to 68 percent. So it’s difficult
Now, say my daughter were to get sick for 10 days, miserable with
a high fever and screaming ear pain. Say our doctor said her ear
canal checked out as angry red. Am I going to have my daughter
take the prescription? Probably so. We cared for a young woman
at the hospital where I worked who was literally at her death
bed with overwhelming Streptococcal - bacterial - pneumonia. One
of her lungs was saturated with the infection, which had also
I went on to my next rotation thinking that was the last I would
hear of that patient. However, I later spoke with her attending
physician. He told me she walked out of that hospital, completely
cured. So, antibiotics save lives, but it’s not exactly a common
occurrence. Certainly, most of you out there suffering from the
common cold are not near death, so you should think twice about
The non-synthetic antibiotics are fungal by-products called mycotoxins.
Penicillin is perhaps the best example. In other words, mycotoxins
kill off fungi’s competitors, allowing fungi to grab up all of
the nutrients for themselves. Alexander Fleming himself observed
this in action, and it later led him to develop penicillin. When
a mold - molds are fungi - contaminated a bacteria colony upon
which Fleming was performing an experiment, the invader cleared
the area around it of all bacteria. When Fleming investigated,
It turned out that the fungus had produced a substance he would
Just because they kill bacteria, you may be thinking, doesn’t
mean that some, many or especially all of the mycotoxins used
as antibiotics are necessarily harmful to human beings. A. V.
Costantini in effect counters this idea when he speaks of the
work of two scientists by the name of Bernstein and Ross. Costantini
says that the men found that two or more months of treatment with
penicillin and other antibiotics contributed to what they saw
as a “significantly increased risk of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma in
How many people, children included, have undergone dose after
dose of antibiotics for recurring infections? Doug and I believe
that these relatively small doses taken over long periods of time
are actually harming us in similar, incremental fashion, later
We take antibiotics when we are sick, when our immune systems
weaken. The mycotoxins pharmacies dispense for use as antibiotics
only exacerbate the problem, because the lion’s share of these
substances have been shown to be immunosuppressants (CAST Report
No. 116. November 1989.). Not only are they capable of hamstringing
our immune systems, they also destroy the friendly bacteria that
These friendly bacteria include Lactobacillus acidophilus, Bifidus
and Bulgaricus, supplements for which can be found in any health
food store’s refrigerated section. They protect us against pathogens
such as Salmonella, yeast, cholera, and the bad E. coli. They
are so potent that, prior a trip abroad, to protect yourself from
traveler’s diarrhea you’d do better to skip the usual antibiotics
Unfortunately, these good flora are so vulnerable to antibiotics
that, in mice, a “single injection of streptomycin can eradicate
the protective effect of the normal flora. (Mandell. Principles
and Practice of Infectious Diseases. 2000.) ” And, once gone, these
friendly bacteria are replaced by hostile bacteria such as Pseudomonas,
Clostridium, and Klebsiella, and by Candida yeast, a powerful
So, we have the good and the bad regarding our chemical friends
known as antibiotics. They can “save the day” at times, but they
have ruined them at others -- just ask any woman with a yeast
infection or look at any baby who suffers from thrush. You should
know that, even should you just say “no ” when your doctor moves
to prescribe antibiotics for you, theoretically speaking you may
still be taking them with every bite of steak and pork you eat.
That’s because more antibiotics per pound are used on livestock
than in human medicine. How much of those antibiotics are passed
on is difficult to determine, but the mere possibility of this
Our goal in this book is to educate you and to help you make informed
1. An ounce of prevention.... Exercise, eat intelligently and
take a few supplements. Avoid alcohol, smoking, and recreational
Despite our best efforts, most of us will get sick at some point
and decide to go see a doctor. If you are a stubborn, married
2. Ask Questions. If your doctor diagnoses you with an upper respiratory
infection, sore throat (in which the strep test is negative),
bronchitis, sinusitis, or ear infection, and you wonder if you
really need an antibiotic, make a point of asking her about it.
A lot of physicians would be pleasantly surprised that one of
their patients would even consider trying to recuperate without
antibiotics. Ask if you can treat your condition symptomatically
If your questions annoy your doctor, then get another doctor.
After all, you pay the bills, either directly or out of your paycheck
in the form of insurance, and you deserve adequate treatment.
On the other hand, if you feel you, in fact, do need an antibiotic
and your doctor disagrees, try to work a deal in which she will
prescribe an antibiotic for you if you don’t feel better in a
couple of days. I learned an important lesson about this kind
of disagreement during college, on a visit to the infirmary. The
doctor there refused to give me an antibiotic for a URI I’d come
down with. I had to suppress my anger at what I saw as arrogance
on his part, but lo and behold, he was right. I got better without
the pills I’d been sure I’d needed. I think a lot of people tend
to underestimate their bodies’ healing abilities, in much the
same way as I did. That’s just one reason why doctors are oftentimes
in a better position to make the call as to whether or not to
3. Take an objective look at yourself and your life-style. If
you keep coming down with the same thing, do some research and
a little thinking. Do you drink a lot of soda? Do you smoke? Are
you taking antibiotic after antibiotic and now have a secondary
yeast or fungal infection? How is your spiritual life? Your stress
As far as chronic sinus infections go, Johns Hopkins researchers
are now saying most such conditions are caused by a fungus. So,
if you do have chronic sinusitis, stop taking antibiotics, get
on an antifungal diet, and ask your doctor for antifungal medications.
If your doctor refuses, visit a health food store for natural,
off-the-shelf antifungals such as olive leaf extract, garlic,
Once you improve, make sure you go back and let your doctor know
how things worked out. Chances are she is neither experienced
nor comfortable with prescribing antifungal medication. Your story
may convince her to do her own research, the first step to changing
It shouldn’t be too difficult to convince your doctor to let you
try a prescription of nystatin. As one of the better gut antifungals,
1. Get the facts. Ask your doctor how many days you must take
the antibiotic and if you, in fact, do need the latest, most powerful
one on the market. Simple urinary tract infections are now treated
with only three days of antibiotics. Sinus infections, bronchitis,
and ear infections in children over two years of age can be treated
with as few as five days of antibiotics, new or old, generic or
name brand. This may not be possible, however, if you have other
2. Build trust. Commit to the full course of the antibiotic unless
you experience significant side effects or an allergic reaction.
You sought medical advice and agreed to the prescription. You
will build trust with your doctor if you work as a team. This
3. Take an antifungal with the antibiotic. For example, you could
ask your doctor for a prescription of nystatin to take during
the course of your antibiotic. Many dermatologists do this when
prescribing long-term antibiotic courses for acne. I suggest adults
take two tablets twice a day - 1 cc of suspension twice a day
for children - to prevent yeast overgrowth in your intestines.
Most cases of upset stomach or diarrhea that kick in a few days
of beginning a round of antibiotics can be cured with a single
dose of the drug. Diarrhea after a two-week round of antibiotics
is likely caused by a different bug altogether - be sure to bring
I should tell you that, in my clinical practice years, many of
my patients made great strides against acne through taking nystatin
4. Supplement your intake. Take an antioxidant supplement, one
which includes vitamin E, zinc, selenium, vitamin C, and vitamin
A, among others. According to A.V. Costantini, all antioxidants
5. Keep your bowels moving. If antibiotics kill off your friendly,
intestinal bacteria, once you cease taking antibiotics you’ll
run a higher risk of infection by other, more hostile bacteria.
These bacteria will be quick to find and exploit pockets of debris
that could be collecting and putrefying in your intestines if
you happen to become constipated. So, be sure to keep your digestive
tract as clear as possible until you can repopulate it with friendly
bacteria. Psyllium hulls fiber from your local health food store
is the best, bulk fiber to use, as long as you don’t have a history
of intestinal obstruction. Psyllium not only relieves constipation.
6. Replace the good bacteria in your intestines. Supplement with
an acidophilus supplement for a few weeks following any course
of antibiotics. Do not take these simultaneously with your antibiotic,
or you will simply end up with a lot of very dead, albeit still
friendly bacteria in your intestines. At the very most, take acidophilus
supplements either in between antibiotic doses or after you have
7. Look back at why you became ill to begin with. I once suffered
from strep throat after indulging in half a box of chocolates.
That should have come as no surprise. Who wouldn’t be crippled
by that amount of garbage? More than likely, you have your own
experience regarding similar binges. My point is, diet plays at
least as much a role as actual exposure to germs as to whether
we get sick -- when we are healthy and eating correctly, our bodies
One, last note: Please ignore advertisements that recommend guzzling
orange juice for the vitamin C it contains. A big dose of sugar
is what you’d actually be getting. I have heard more than a few
patients note that once they felt they were coming down with something,
they immediately began downing glass after glass of orange juice,
only to get even sicker. They concluded that they must not have
caught the illness in time, which couldn’t have been any further
The truth is, they simply fueled the fire of their infections
with lots of sugar, all because they trusted a corporation’s advertisement
to educate them about proper healing strategies. If you want that
much vitamin C, you will be perfectly fine taking it in the 1,000
mg pill form a few times a day. As far as fluid requirements are
concerned, your body is 70 percent water – and that is exactly