I love drugs. I really do. Always have. Not the illegal kind so much. I was never very good at those and haven’t gone there for many years. I’m an over-the-counter girl. With the odd antibiotic prescription.
I don’t go anywhere these days without a little emergency pack of useful drugs in my handbag. In my emergency pack I have emergency doses of all kinds of wonderful things including Panadol, Nurafen, Naprogesic (which I use to treat the early symptoms of a migraine), Ventolin and Noroxin (an antibiotic for cystitis). Because emergencies do happen. And I like to be prepared.
So frankly, I’ve never understood people who talk about medicine as if it’s a bad thing. You know the ones. They say: “Oh no, I would never give my child Panadol or Nurofen! I don’t believe in it!” And: “We don’t do antibiotics in our house! They are poison!”
These people are often the same ones who mistrust doctors, believe pharmaceutical companies are secretly trying to kill us and would rather give birth in an inflatable plastic pool than in a hospital with trained professionals and world class life-saving medical equipment.
This wholesale rejection of medication and medical advice seems to be part of a bigger and more troubling movement towards a mistrust of experts and it baffles me, truly.
From my first world vantage point, it seems like the ultimate privilege to be smug about the fact you don’t take medication or to take pride in refusing antibiotics for your child. Making that choice doesn’t make you better than anyone else. It just makes you very,very lucky to even have a choice. It’s the ultimate luxury.
Top Comments
I really think you need to do some reading and research on gut health. This has become a very big issue in recent years and education on the subject is definitely on the up. There is much evidence and research to show that antibiotics are not great for us. They wipe out everything. And having back to back courses of antibiotics can have dire consequences, as some close friends have discovered. Sometimes we need to dig deeper, not continually medicate and put blind faith in the GP.
Panadol and nurofen are a milder 'drug', agree, but they are not without their consequences too. Research gut lining.
I am a mum of four and have given Panadol and antibiotics (and vaccinations), but I avoid it if possible.
I urge you to do further research on good gut health.
Truth 😄👏👏👏
I'm on prescribed medication for (probably) the rest of my life (I have Epilepsy).
It seems to me that if they are denying them simple drugs like Panadol (why!) then would they deny them the kinds of drugs that could seriously help them?
I don't know what my life would have been like without my medication, and I dread to think the injuries I would have gained from seizures. In fits of "I don't need medication" I've broken my nose, and smashed off half a front tooth (through my lip). I will never stop taking my medication again and when I have children, I will NOT deny them the right to have their suffering eased. Even if it's just with a little Panadol.