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It's not really an individual using them too much, it's thousands of individuals being prescribed them and all of them taking 1/3 to 1/2 the amount that was prescribed because they started feeling better or just forgot.
If you use antibiotics you want to kill all the bacteria you're trying to kill. If you kill 80-90% of it the bacteria leftover are the ones that are more resistant to that antibiotic, and so if that heartier segment of the bacterial infection spreads it become more difficult to treat with antibiotics.
overuse is a huge, huge problem-- everytime you use antibiotics, you are selecting for resistant bacteria that can now colonize the "real estate" leftover from the now-dead bacteria. This is actually a pretty big thing-- one of the best ways our body stops things like brutal ecoli infections from giving us the runs is just from our gut being lined with healthy bacteria, and not providing any decent real estate for the bacteria to lodge themselves in, and start growing. Unfortunately, antibiotics are rarely specific-- even something as narrow-spec as amoxicillin (beta-lactamase) will destroy all kinds of beneficial bacteria.
Many of the superbugs we now currently have are due to overuse of antibiotics in the healthcare, and agricultural spheres. Even our broad-spec bazookas like carbapenems are now useless against certain types of Enterococcus bacteria because farmers in China have used the drug to feed their chickens.
It's a mess. Antiobiotic-resistant bacterial infections are going to cause incredible public harm towards the end of the 21st century-- some say it'll kill more than cancer.
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You are correct in that patients are supposed to complete their course of antibiotics as specified by the pharmacist or the physician-- if you don't, there is chance that a resistant bacteria will grow and re-infect you. Correct on that point, Gameface.
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