Vital Truths about Antibiotics

Dr Vernon Coleman





Serious infections need to be treated quickly – usually within an hour or two of symptoms developing. It is the failure to treat infections speedily which explains why the incidence of sepsis has reached epidemic proportions. Sadly, many infections which could be treated effectively are not treated quickly enough and patients die unnecessary. One reason is that doctors are often simply not available. In the UK, GPs no longer provide a decent service. Nearly all so-called family doctors refuse to visit patients at home either at night, at weekends or even during the working day. Many doctors refuse to see patients face to face insisting on providing half-hearted and totally inadequate advice after a telephone or internet consultation. (It has been shown that patients who are `treated’ this way are more likely to die.) And patients who require an appointment with a GP often have to wait several weeks to be seen – even in an emergency.

Hospital services are little better. Patients who can somehow find a way to visit their local Accident and Emergency unit often have to wait days to be seen. Many will be dead long before they see a doctor. And, finally, doc tors are increasingly reluctant to prescribe antibiotics. It has been known since the 1970s (when I first wrote about it) that over-use of antibiotics has led to the development of antibiotic resistant organisms. And so doctors feel that they are protecting the world from these resistant organisms if they do not prescribe antibiotics. This, of course, is a nonsense. Not prescribing antibiotics soon enough merely gives infections a chance to spread and do more damage.

And, for the record, for those worried about increasing antibiotic resistance, most antibiotics are prescribed not by doctors but by vets who dole them out by the ton to farmers who dose their animals on them in order to help them put on weight (and be more profitable).

It is also worth noting that hospital staff who leave their hospitals while still wearing their uniforms are helping to spread antibiotic resistant organisms within their local community.

Bizarrely, global warming is now given as another reason for not prescribing antibiotics. The idiot doctors who believe in global warming (or who are part of the paid cabal promoting this absurd notion) claim that the manufacture and distribution of antibiotics requires energy and, therefore, the drugs should not be prescribed. Of course, the real reason for not prescribing life-saving antibiotics is that restricting drug availability is part of the depopulation plan. Your doctor doesn’t want to save you, he wants you dead.

The bottom line is that we all need to have access to antibiotics without needing a prescription. Unfortunately, in most countries antibiotics are only available on prescription and doctors refuse to prescribe them appropriately. However, there is a solution. A bloke I met in a pub told me that he had obtained a supply of antibiotics for possible emergency use for himself or a member of his family by visiting an online medical service which provided antibiotics for travellers. He told me that he had filled in an online form saying that he would be travelling abroad and would need a supply of medicines to help deal with emergency health problems. The medicines supplied included a well-known broad spectrum antibiotic.

Another man I met in a pub told me that he had obtained antibiotics for emergency use by telling an online doctor that he had a serious tooth infection.

These methods of obtaining antibiotics do involve some mild deceit, of course, and I would not dream of using either of these tricks. I would obviously rather die of septicaemia than obtain antibiotics in an improper manner. I feel sure that you too, dear reader, will feel the same way. But I mention these techniques merely as theoretical examples of what is happening in the world.

It’s odd, is it not that in olden days travellers used to consider it wise to take a supply of essential medicines with them when travelling abroad to what were known as Third World Countries but these days people travelling to Britain need to bring a supply of essential medicines with them.

Most drugs don’t suddenly stop working on the day when they reach their `best before’ date and, indeed, in the distant past a number of charities collected up out of date drugs and sent them off to less fortunate countries where the local citizenry were deprived of decent health care. We can only hope that before long an enterprising charity collects up unused antibiotics in Africa and sends them to the deprived citizens of the United Kingdom.

Incidentally, keep well clear of any health care workers who are wearing their work clothing outside their place of employment. There is clear evidence that antibiotic resistant organisms are being carried out of hospitals on the clothing of staff members. It would make sense for the authorities to arrest (for attempted murder) any hospital or clinic staff who go shopping or catch public transport while wearing the clothes they wear at work.

NOTE
The article above is taken from `The End of Medicine’ by Vernon Coleman. For details of how to purchase a copy of the book please CLICK HERE

Copyright Vernon Coleman October 2025





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