[Urgent] New Top KILLER Taking Over U.S.
There’s a sinister health threat looming on the horizon.
Some have predicted that this threat will be as severe as terrorism.
Others have said it will take us back to the dark ages.
Now, according to a recent report, this bleak future could happen much sooner than anyone could have predicted.
But you don’t have to be the next victim.
Here’s what you need to know to protect yourself and the ones you love.
It hasn’t even been 100 years since Alexander Fleming received the Nobel Prize in 1945 for discovering penicillin.
But his acceptance speech came with an eerie caution.
He warned of a time when antibiotics would become less effective due to improper or overly abundant use.
And now, just 73 years later, his long-forgotten prediction has become a TERRIFYING reality.
Previous reports indicated that approximately 23,000 people die in the US every year from antibiotic-resistant infections.
But a new study has found that the reality is more alarming. MUCH more alarming.
The latest numbers put deaths from antibiotic-resistance at over 150,000 people every single year.
That’s 6.6 times higher than we thought.
This new calculation puts superbugs as the third leading cause of death… following closely behind only heart disease and cancer.
Part of this dramatic increase is due to new, more accurate reporting methods.
But this doesn’t mean more people are startingto die from superbugs… It means these bugs have been killing people for much longer than anyone fully realized.
And the true numbers are likely even higher than that.
Any way you slice it, it’s bad news.
So what can you do to make sure you’re not contributing to this problem?
- Don’t take antibiotics unless it’s absolutely necessary. That means NOT taking them for the common cold (which is viral, meaning antibiotics don’t do a darn thing for it). That also means NOT taking them for prevention.
- If you do have to take them, be sure to take the entire course.
- Stop using antibacterial hand soap. Even the FDA has acknowledged that it could contribute to antibiotic resistance.
To a brighter day,
Dr. Richard Gerhauser, M.D.