A Holistic Approach to Antibiotic Resistance
A Holistic Approach to Antibiotic Resistance
When it comes to our health, there are two schools of thought: the Germ Theory and the Terrain Theory. Understanding the differences is critical, particularly because it involves the use of antibiotics, which should be used sparingly and for the right reasons. So let's examine this often confusing topic.
Two Different Theories
The Germ Theory
The Germ Theory asserts that, regardless of the state of our health, germs that can cause disease will, indeed, cause disease. That's because the germ is responsible for our illness and not the overall state of our health.
Traditional medical practice calls for identifying and destroying invading germs, including bacteria (but not by viruses including cold and flu) through the use of antibiotics. Unfortunately, antibiotics are often over-prescribed and germs are mutating to survive them.
The Terrain Theory, embraced by holistic practitioners, asserts that germs that can cause disease do so when the body is more susceptible and that the healthier we are (the terrain), the less likely we’ll become ill or the less severe the illness will be. In other words, when the body's internal environment is at its best, then immunity, metabolism, and detoxification are at their strongest. Consequently, the body is less susceptible to illness and has the best defense against "disease causing" germs. Antibiotics are used sparingly and primarily in life-threatening situations.
The Terrain Theory
The Terrain Theory, embraced by holistic practitioners, asserts that germs that can cause disease do so when the body is more susceptible and that the healthier we are (the terrain), the less likely we’ll become ill or the less severe the illness will be. In other words, when the body's internal environment is at its best, then immunity, metabolism, and detoxification are at their strongest. Consequently, the body is less susceptible to illness and has the best defense against "disease causing" germs. Antibiotics are used sparingly and primarily in life-threatening situations.
It's important to understand that taking antibiotics does not contribute to building immunity; they are prescribed for treatment, not prevention, and there is the real threat of resistance.
Antibiotic Risks and Drug Resistant Disease
When prescribed judiciously by doctors and used properly by patients, antibiotics can save lives by destroying bacteria or stopping it from reproducing. Despite the wonders of this medicine, there are setbacks:
20% of people experience side effects including gastrointestinal, kidney, menstrual, and joint abnormalities after taking antibiotics. Risk for side effects increase with each additional ten days of use.
About 10% of people are allergic to antibiotics.
In the U.S. more than two million illnesses per year are caused by resistance to antibiotics, resulting in 23,000 deaths when these drugs fail to work.
Antibiotic resistance (AR) means that the germ targeted by the medication has mounted defenses that render the drug ineffective even when taken properly. Situations and conditions that present the greatest risk for AR include:
Overuse of antibiotics
Not taking the medicine as prescribed
Long hospital stays
Working in parts of the world that lack proper hygiene
Not having the ability to meet essential nutritional needs
Improperly handling raw meat, consuming contaminated meat, crops, or water
Contact with infected individuals
Protect Your Internal Terrain from AR
Healthcare is faced with a dangerous rise in antibiotic resistance, making the more holistic "terrain approach" to battling germs vital to preserving health. Here's what you can do:
Take a probiotic supplement, a quality multivitamin, follow a quarterly detox regimen, get adequate sleep, and eat a variety of whole foods
Choose organic foods (antibiotic-free meats, non-GMO grains)
Filter your water (drugs disposed of at landfills can get into groundwater supply)
Limit your intake of sugar and processed foods (these lower immune function)
The unfortunate truth is the "kill the germ" perspective is failing. We will reach a point where we do not have effective antibiotics. By bolstering the internal terrain, a healthy and vibrant person can mount the immune defenses necessary to protect their health.