

I frequently visit colleagues, friends, and family members admitted to hospitals, and I always complain about the lack of mandatory handwashing sinks. To this day, whenever I go to a hospital, I just need to show a document, or simply state the patient's name and head to the room and ward.

SILVIOLOBO recommends that hospitals and clinics install sinks with soap and alcohol gel so that visitors are required to wash their hands before entering the hospital premises.
If even doctors, nurses, and technicians don't take this precaution, what can be expected from laypeople?
Another major problem is not the patient's fault, as the indiscriminate use of antibiotics is not a choice but a desperate act by those who cannot find medical assistance in time.
Broadly speaking, but more explanatorily, antibiotics are like bullets from a revolver; you have to save them for the right moment. If you waste them on something common, you won't have ammunition for serious matters.
It's not that the bullets run out, but the enemy becomes stronger than them. Therefore, do not use medication on your own and never interrupt a treatment on your own. It is important to finish the dose prescribed by the doctor, otherwise, some resistant bacteria may have survived in your body, and the new and next infection will be much tougher than the first one, and this time the drugs will not be effective against the disease.



