An example of this situation is how a strain of Staphylococcus aureus (bacteria) developed a resistant to an antibiotic called methicillin (MRSA Infection 2015). As a result, the methicillin-resistant bacteria that has infected a patient(for example) could no longer be treated with that particular antibiotic drug because it is not effective anymore. The good thing about it is that other antibiotics can still work. Specifically, …show more content…
A difficult part of preventing the spread is awareness. Many people think that antibiotics can cure a cold or a common flu, but they thought wrong. In fact, cold and flu are caused by viral infections, which are not treatable by antibiotics; only bacterias are affected. Bacterias are could live normally and peacefully inside our bodies, as long as they keep each other in check. When meaningless treatment of flu by taking antibiotics is done, the balance in the normal bacterial level within the body fluctuates. This means the bacterias that are weak dies: and the strong ones survive, possibly developing resistance for that antibiotic. The understanding of antibiotic use is an important way of prevention. Another way is called compliance. Following the prescription, for example, “once a day for 2 months”, is the method that doctors use to inhibit the growth of resistant bacterias. By taking the right amount, and at the correct time, even the strong bacterias would not be able to fight waves and waves of the drug, and result in successfully treating the